Fermi problem
In physics or engineering education, a Fermi problem (or Fermi quiz, Fermi question, Fermi estimate), also known as a order-of-magnitude problem (or order-of-magnitude estimate, order estimation), is an estimation problem designed to teach dimensional analysis or approximation of extreme scientific calculations, and such a problem is usually a back-of-the-envelope calculation. The estimation technique is named after physicist Enrico Fermi as he was known for his ability to make good approximate calculations with little or no actual data. Fermi problems typically involve making justified guesses about quantities and their variance or lower and upper bounds. In some cases, order-of-magnitude estimates can also be derived using dimensional analysis.
Historical background
An example is Enrico Fermi's estimate of the strength of the atomic bomb that detonated at the Trinity test, based on the distance traveled by pieces of paper he dropped from his hand during the blast. Fermi's estimate of 10 kilotons of TNT was well within an order of magnitude of the now-accepted value of 21 kilotons.[1][2][3]
Examples
Fermi questions are often extreme in nature, and cannot usually be solved using common mathematical or scientific information.
Example questions given by the official Fermi Competition:[clarification needed]
"If the mass of one teaspoon of water could be converted entirely into energy in the form of heat, what volume of water, initially at room temperature, could it bring to a boil? (litres).""How much does the Thames River heat up in going over the Fanshawe Dam? (Celsius degrees).""What is the mass of all the automobiles scrapped in North America this month? (kilograms)."[4][5]
Possibly the most famous Fermi Question is the Drake equation, which seeks to estimate the number of intelligent civilizations in the galaxy. The basic question of why, if there were a significant number of such civilizations, human civilization has never encountered any others is called the Fermi paradox.[6]
Advantages and scope
Scientists often look for Fermi estimates of the answer to a problem before turning to more sophisticated methods to calculate a precise answer. This provides a useful check on the results. While the estimate is almost certainly incorrect, it is also a simple calculation that allows for easy error checking, and to find faulty assumptions if the figure produced is far beyond what we might reasonably expect. By contrast, precise calculations can be extremely complex but with the expectation that the answer they produce is correct. The far larger number of factors and operations involved can obscure a very significant error, either in mathematical process or in the assumptions the equation is based on, but the result may still be assumed to be right because it has been derived from a precise formula that is expected to yield good results. Without a reasonable frame of reference to work from it is seldom clear if a result is acceptably precise or is many degrees of magnitude (tens or hundreds of times) too big or too small. The Fermi estimation gives a quick, simple way to obtain this frame of reference for what might reasonably be expected to be the answer.
As long as the initial assumptions in the estimate are reasonable quantities, the result obtained will give an answer within the same scale as the correct result, and if not gives a base for understanding why this is the case. For example, suppose a person was asked to determine the number of piano tuners in Chicago. If their initial estimate told them there should be a hundred or so, but the precise answer tells them there are many thousands, then they know they need to find out why there is this divergence from the expected result. First looking for errors, then for factors the estimation did not take account of – does Chicago have a number of music schools or other places with a disproportionately high ratio of pianos to people? Whether close or very far from the observed results, the context the estimation provides gives useful information both about the process of calculation and the assumptions that have been used to look at problems.
Fermi estimates are also useful in approaching problems where the optimal choice of calculation method depends on the expected size of the answer. For instance, a Fermi estimate might indicate whether the internal stresses of a structure are low enough that it can be accurately described by linear elasticity; or if the estimate already bears significant relationship in scale relative to some other value, for example, if a structure will be over-engineered to withstand loads several times greater than the estimate.[citation needed]
Although Fermi calculations are often not accurate, as there may be many problems with their assumptions, this sort of analysis does inform one what to look for to get a better answer. For the above example, one might try to find a better estimate of the number of pianos tuned by a piano tuner in a typical day, or look up an accurate number for the population of Chicago. It also gives a rough estimate that may be good enough for some purposes: if a person wants to start a store in Chicago that sells piano tuning equipment, and calculates that they need 10,000 potential customers to stay in business, they can reasonably assume that the above estimate is far enough below 10,000 that they should consider a different business plan (and, with a little more work, they could compute a rough upper bound on the number of piano tuners by considering the most extreme reasonable values that could appear in each of their assumptions).
Explanation
Fermi estimates generally work because the estimations of the individual terms are often close to correct, and overestimates and underestimates help cancel each other out. That is, if there is no consistent bias, a Fermi calculation that involves the multiplication of several estimated factors (such as the number of piano tuners in Chicago) will probably be more accurate than might be first supposed.
In detail, multiplying estimates corresponds to adding their logarithms; thus one obtains a sort of Wiener process or random walk on the logarithmic scale, which diffuses as [math]\displaystyle{ \sqrt{n} }[/math] (in number of terms n). In discrete terms, the number of overestimates minus underestimates will have a binomial distribution. In continuous terms, if one makes a Fermi estimate of n steps, with standard deviation σ units on the log scale from the actual value, then the overall estimate will have standard deviation [math]\displaystyle{ \sigma\sqrt{n} }[/math], since the standard deviation of a sum scales as [math]\displaystyle{ \sqrt{n} }[/math] in the number of summands.
For instance, if one makes a 9-step Fermi estimate, at each step overestimating or underestimating the correct number by a factor of 2 (or with a standard deviation 2), then after 9 steps the standard error will have grown by a logarithmic factor of [math]\displaystyle{ \sqrt{9} = 3 }[/math], so 23 = 8. Thus one will expect to be within 1⁄8 to 8 times the correct value – within an order of magnitude, and much less than the worst case of erring by a factor of 29 = 512 (about 2.71 orders of magnitude). If one has a shorter chain or estimates more accurately, the overall estimate will be correspondingly better.
See also
- Guesstimate
- Dead reckoning
- Handwaving
- Heuristic
- Order of approximation
- Stein's example
- Spherical cow
References
- ↑ "A Backward Glance: Eyewitnesses to Trinity". Nuclear Weapons Journal (Los Alamos National Laboratory) (2): 45. 2005. https://www.lanl.gov/orgs/padwp/pdfs/11nwj2-05.pdf. Retrieved 27 October 2022.
- ↑ Von Baeyer, Hans Christian (September 1988). "How Fermi Would Have Fixed It". The Sciences 28 (5): 2–4. doi:10.1002/j.2326-1951.1988.tb03037.x.
- ↑ Von Baeyer, Hans Christian (2001). "The Fermi Solution". The Fermi Solution: Essays on Science. Dover Publications. pp. 3–12. ISBN 9780486417073. OCLC 775985788. https://books.google.com/books?id=VhJr9Qx8ohsC&pg=PA3.
- ↑ Weinstein, L.B. (2012). "Fermi Questions". Old Dominion University.. https://www.lions.odu.edu/~lweinste/wag.html.
- ↑ Fermi Questions. Richard K Curtis. 2001.
- ↑ Ćirković, Milan M. (10 May 2018). The Great Silence: Science and Philosophy of Fermi's Paradox. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199646302.
Further reading
The following books contain many examples of Fermi problems with solutions:
- John Harte, Consider a Spherical Cow: A Course in Environmental Problem Solving University Science Books. 1988. ISBN:0-935702-58-X.
- John Harte, Consider a Cylindrical Cow: More Adventures in Environmental Problem Solving University Science Books. 2001. ISBN:1-891389-17-3.
- Clifford Swartz, Back-of-the-Envelope Physics Johns Hopkins University Press. 2003. ISBN:0-8018-7263-4. ISBN:978-0801872631.
- Lawrence Weinstein & John A. Adam, Guesstimation: Solving the World's Problems on the Back of a Cocktail Napkin Princeton University Press. 2008. ISBN:0-691-12949-5. ISBN:978-1-4008-2444-1. A textbook on Fermi problems.
- Aaron Santos, How Many Licks?: Or, How to Estimate Damn Near Anything. Running Press. 2009. ISBN:0-7624-3560-7. ISBN:978-0-7624-3560-9.
- Sanjoy Mahajan, Street-Fighting Mathematics: The Art of Educated Guessing and Opportunistic Problem Solving MIT Press. 2010. ISBN:026251429X. ISBN:978-0262514293.
- Göran Grimvall, Quantify! A Crash Course in Smart Thinking Johns Hopkins University Press. 2010. ISBN:0-8018-9717-3. ISBN:978-0-8018-9717-7.
- Lawrence Weinstein, Guesstimation 2.0: Solving Today's Problems on the Back of a Napkin Princeton University Press. 2012. ISBN:978-0-691-15080-2.
- Sanjoy Mahajan, The Art of Insight in Science and Engineering MIT Press. 2014. ISBN:9780262526548.
- Dmitry Budker, Alexander O. Sushkov, Physics on your feet. Berkeley Graduate Exam Questions Oxford University Press. 2015. ISBN:978-0199681655.
- Rob Eastaway, Maths on the Back of an Envelope: Clever ways to (roughly) calculate anything HarperCollins. 2019. ISBN:978-0008324582.
External links
- The University of Maryland Physics Education Group maintains a collection of Fermi problems.
- Fermi Questions: A Guide for Teachers, Students, and Event Supervisors by Lloyd Abrams.
- "What if? Paint the Earth" from the book What if? Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions by Randall Munroe.
- An example of a Fermi Problem relating to total gasoline consumed by cars since the invention of cars and comparison to the output of the energy released by the sun.
- "Introduction to Fermi estimates" by Nuño Sempere, which has a proof sketch of why Fermi-style decompositions produce better estimates.
- "How should mathematics be taught to non-mathematicians?" by Timothy Gowers.
There are or have been a number of university-level courses devoted to estimation and the solution of Fermi problems. The materials for these courses are a good source for additional Fermi problem examples and material about solution strategies:
- 6.055J / 2.038J The Art of Approximation in Science and Engineering taught by Sanjoy Mahajan at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
- Physics on the Back of an Envelope taught by Lawrence Weinstein at Old Dominion University.
- Order of Magnitude Physics taught by Sterl Phinney at the California Institute of Technology.
- Order of Magnitude Estimation taught by Patrick Chuang at the University of California, Santa Cruz.
- Order of Magnitude Problem Solving taught by Linda Strubbe at the University of Toronto.
- Order of Magnitude Physics taught by Eugene Chiang at the University of California, Berkeley.
- Chapter 2: Discoveries on the Back of an Envelope from Frontiers of Science: Scientific Habits of Mind taught by David Helfand at Columbia University.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fermi problem.
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