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Ok, so let me give you the background story.

In my country, unlike the US, there are different high schools for different levels of 'intelligence'. I believe there are 5 or 6 types, the toughest being 'gymnasium' which is for the top 5% I believe.

I am currently enrolled at a 'gymnasium', and they have a special program for the most gifted out of the gifted. I am in this program, and in this program we basically get a couple of hours a week off to work on a presentation for the entire school (in April every year).

Most of the children participating in this program just do nothing in the hours they take off and just give a musical performance, but I wanted to do it about Linear Algebra this year, since I've started a self-study almost a week ago (now I'm learning about null spaces). (Sub-question by the way: Am I fast or not? I started L.A. 5 days ago, never having seen a matrix in my life and now I am learning about null spaces.. but it seems I am going too slow (or maybe that's just because I'm so excited and want to learn more and more every day)).

My main question is:

What would be interesting in a presentation of Linear Algebra? What concepts, ideas, etc. are mind-blowing and would be nice (for an intellectual crowd, don't worry about people being completely disinterested in math).

You can give an advanced answer, it's October and I still have half a year!

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    @ZafarS Unfortunately good advice doesn't always come sugarcoated :)2012-10-10

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Probably not the most amazing, but fairly easy to explain to a non-nerd crowd: finding area and volume using determinants.

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    I second the idea! And may I suggest presenting a geometric (informal) proof of Cramer's rule?2012-10-10
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There is a lovely little book by Jiri Matousek, called Thirty-three Miniatures: Mathematical and Algorithmic Applications of Linear Algebra, published by the American Mathematical Society.

EDIT: Here are some of the topics discussed in this book:

If every club in Oddtown must have an odd number of members, and every pair of (distinct) clubs must have an even number of members in common, then the number of clubs can't exceed the number of citizens.

Error-correcting codes.

What's the largest number of lines in 3-space such that the angle between every two of them is the same?

A rectangle $1\times x$, where $x$ is irrational, can't be tiled by finitely many squares.

The Matrix-Tree Theorem.