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{{short description|German mathematician}} |
{{short description|German mathematician}} |
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”’Walter Trump”’ (born 1953<ref>Andreas Stiller: [https://www.heise.de/ct/artikel/Der-Wuerfel-ist-gefallen-289094.html ”Der Würfel ist gefallen. Kleinster perfekter magischer Würfel gefunden”]. heise.de, 1 December 2003 (German) </ref>) is a German mathematician and retired high school teacher. He is known for his work in [[recreational mathematics]]. |
”’Walter Trump”’ (born 1953<ref>Andreas Stiller: [https://www.heise.de/ct/artikel/Der-Wuerfel-ist-gefallen-289094.html ”Der Würfel ist gefallen. Kleinster perfekter magischer Würfel gefunden”]. heise.de, 1 December 2003 (German) </ref>) is a German mathematician and retired high school teacher. He is known for his work in [[recreational mathematics]]. |
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Latest revision as of 03:29, 23 November 2025
German mathematician
Walter Trump (born 1953[1]) is a German mathematician and retired high school teacher. He is known for his work in recreational mathematics.
He has made contributions working on both the square packing problem and the magic tile problem. In 1979 he discovered the optimal known packing of 11 equal squares in a larger square,[2] and in 2003, along with Christian Boyer, developed the first known magic cube of order 5.[3] In 2012, Trump et al. described a model for retention of liquid on random surfaces.[4]
In 2014, he and Francis Gaspalou were able to calculate all 8 × 8 bimagic squares.[5]
Until he retired in 2016, Trump worked as a teacher for mathematics and physics at the Gymnasium in Stein, Bavaria.


