You've probably heard of a formula before. There are formulas to make and find all kinds of things. Did you know that there are formulas that turn numbers into twisty, curvy shapes?
Choose a shape and formula by rolling the silver wheel. Each formula will have different numbers that you can change. Turn the lighted knobs to adjust the numbers in the formula and watch happens to the shape on the screen!
Can you find a knob that makes the shape taller? That makes the shape fatter? That adds bumps and waves, or takes them away? What happens when you turn more than one knob?
The shapes on the right and left sides of the screen are created by museum visitors. Those two shapes combine to make the shape in the middle. Move the lever in the center of the console from the left to the right to watch the shape morph!





The Mathematisches Forschungsinstitut Oberwolfach is located in the German Black Forest. It was founded in 1944 and has developed over the years into an internationally renowned research institute. In mathematical research, interchange of ideas plays a central role. The high degree of abstraction of mathematics and the compact way it is presented necessitate direct personal communication. Although most new results are nowadays quickly made available to the mathematical community via electronic media, this cannot replace personal contact among scientists. The importance of personal contact can only increase with the constant increase of specialization. Therefore, the Institute concentrates on cooperative research activities of larger groups (workshop programs) or smaller groups (mini-workshop programs and Research in Pairs). In all activities, participation of promising young scientists plays an important role. Every year the institute hosts about 2,500 mathematicians.

David Hilbert famously asked whether a "formula," or rather, a system of algebraic equations, as in this exhibit, has solutions with all unknown variables being integers. American mathematician Julia Robinson (1919 - 1985) and her collaborators decisively answered Hilbert's question in a most profound way: it is impossible, in general, to tell! For this work and much else, she received the MacArthur "Genius" Award along with many other accolades.

The Klaus Tschira Foundation supported the SURFER team in their efforts to bring Formula Morph to fruition.
The Klaus Tschira Foundation was established by the physicist Klaus Tschira in 1995 as a non-profit organization. Its primary objective is to support projects in natural and computer sciences as well as mathematics. The Klaus Tschira Foundation places strong emphasis on the public understanding in these fields.

Formula Morph is part of IMAGINARY, an open source platform for interactive mathematics by the Mathematisches Forschungsinstitut Oberwolfach. It is based on the program SURFER, a raytracer for algebraic surfaces in real time. The SURFER software package, developed at Mathematisches Forschungsinstitut Oberwolfach, is used to plot the surfaces you see in Formula Morph.
The SURFER team responsible for this package was: Gert-Martin Greuel, direction; Christian Stussak, programming; Andreas Daniel Matt, coordination and content; with thanks to Valentina Galata, Herwig Hauser, Stephan Klaus, Oliver Labs, and JLaTeXMath.
SURFER can be downloaded for free at the IMAGINARY platform: http://www.imaginary.org