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- From: chris@questrel.com (Chris Cole)
- Subject: rec.puzzles Archive (pickover), part 30 of 35
- Message-ID: <puzzles/archive/pickover/part3_745653851@questrel.com>
- Followup-To: rec.puzzles
- Summary: This is part of an archive of questions
- and answers that may be of interest to
- puzzle enthusiasts.
- Part 1 contains the index to the archive.
- Read the rec.puzzles FAQ for more information.
- Sender: chris@questrel.com (Chris Cole)
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- Organization: Questrel, Inc.
- References: <puzzles/archive/Instructions_745653851@questrel.com>
- Date: Wed, 18 Aug 1993 06:06:43 GMT
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- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu rec.puzzles:25019 news.answers:11539 rec.answers:1939
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- Archive-name: puzzles/archive/pickover/part3
- Last-modified: 17 Aug 1993
- Version: 4
-
-
- ==> pickover/pickover.12.p <==
- Title: Cliff Puzzle 12: Slides in Hell
- From: cliff@watson.ibm.com
-
- If you respond to this puzzle, if possible please send me your name,
- address, affiliation, e-mail address, so I can properly credit you if
- you provide unique information. PLEASE ALSO directly mail me a copy of
- your response in addition to any responding you do in the newsgroup. I
- will assume it is OK to describe your answer in any article or
- publication I may write in the future, with attribution to you, unless
- you state otherwise. Thanks, Cliff Pickover
-
- * * *
-
- Consider a metallic slide with 10 large holes in it equally spaced from
- top to bottom. If you attempt to slide down the slide you have a 50%
- probability of sliding through each hole in the slide into an oleaginous
- substance beneath the slide during each encounter with a hole.
-
- 1. If you were a gambling person, which hole would you bet a person
- would fall through?
-
- 2. If you were a gambling person, how many attempts would it require
- for a person to slide from the top of the slide to the bottom without
- falling through a single hole.
-
- 3. If all the people on earth lined up to go down the slide, and they
- slid down a more horrifying slide with 100 holes at a rate of 1 person
- per second, when would you expect the first person to arrive at the
- bottom of the slide without falling through.
- An hour? A day? A decade? ...
- Received: from uoft02.utoledo.edu by watson.ibm.com (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with TCP;
- Title: Cliff Puzzle 12: Slides in Hell
- >Consider a metallic slide with 10 large holes in it equally spaced from
- >top to bottom. If you attempt to slide down the slide you have a 50%
- >probability of sliding through each hole in the slide into an
- >oleaginous substance beneath the slide during each encounter with a
- >hole.
- >
- >1. If you were a gambling person, which hole would you bet a person
- >would fall through?
-
- None. The best chance is the first hole but I got a 50-50 chance. Why
- bother? (2nd hole is 1/4, 3rd 2**-3, ...)
-
- >2. If you were a gambling person, how many attempts would it require
- >for a person to slide from the top of the slide to the bottom without
- >falling through a single hole.
-
- No gurantee. Each slide is an independent event. Now, if you are
- talking mere probability, on the average, one in 1024 slides may make
- it through all 10 holes.
-
- >3. If all the people on earth lined up to go down the slide, and they
- >slid down a more horrifying slide with 100 holes at a rate of 1 person
- >per second, when would you expect the first person to arrive at the
- >bottom of the slide without falling through. An hour? A day? A decade?
-
- Again, can't tell. It could be the first one, it could be none. Probablity
- can not foretell actual events. But if you have infinite number of people
- sliding down till eternity, on the average, you may see 1 person slide over
- all holes every (2**100)/(365*24*69*6) years. This number is many times
- bigger than the world population for now.
-
- ==> pickover/pickover.12.s <==
- -------------------------
-
- In article <1992Oct23.160130.166012@watson.ibm.com> you write:
- : Consider a metallic slide with 10 large holes in it equally spaced from
- : top to bottom. If you attempt to slide down the slide you have a 50%
- : probability of sliding through each hole in the slide into an oleaginous
- : substance beneath the slide during each encounter with a hole.
- :
- : 1. If you were a gambling person, which hole would you bet a person
- : would fall through?
- The chance of falling thru the first hole is 50%. For the second hole, it
- is (.5)(.5) = 25%, the thrid is (.5)^3 = .125. The chance by the tenth
- hole is about .0097 %. Obviously, since I am limited to one hole, I would
- place my money on hole #1 (best chance).
-
- : 2. If you were a gambling person, how many attempts would it require
- : for a person to slide from the top of the slide to the bottom without
- : falling through a single hole.
- The sum of the prob for falling thru a hole is .5 + .5^2 + .5^3 +...+.5^10.
- This is about 99.902% = .99902. So about 98 times out of 100000, someone
- will make it through without falling. This is about 1 time out of 1020.
- So give or take about 1020 tries....
- :
- : 3. If all the people on earth lined up to go down the slide, and they
- : slid down a more horrifying slide with 100 holes at a rate of 1 person
- : per second, when would you expect the first person to arrive at the
- : bottom of the slide without falling through.
- : An hour? A day? A decade? ...
- The prob for falling thru the last hole is .5^100 = 7.88x10^-31. There must
- be some chance less than this that one WILL make it thru the slide. The MIN
- number of tries that it must take is 1/.5^100 = 1.26x10^30. At the given rate
- this is about 9.647 x 10^23 years, much older than the universe if I remeber
- correctly.
- Also, the chance of making it must be GREATER than .5^101. or with
- all the math, the MAX amount of time is 1.929x10^24 years. So give or
- take about 1.5x10^24 years....
-
-
-
- --
- Michael Neylon aka Masem the Great and Almighty Thermodynamics GOD!
- // | Senior, Chemical Engineering, Univ. of Toledo
- \\ // Only the | Summer Intern, NASA Lewis Research Center
- \ \X/ AMIGA! | mneylon@jupiter.cse.utoledo.edu /
- --------+ How do YOU spell 'potato'? How 'bout 'lousy'? +----------
- "Me and Spike are big Malcolm 10 supporters." - J.S.,P.L.C.L
- -------------------------
-
- In rec.puzzles you write:
-
- >Title: Cliff Puzzle 12: Slides in Hell
- >From: cliff@watson.ibm.com
- >
- >If you respond to this puzzle, if possible please send me your name,
- >address, affiliation, e-mail address, so I can properly credit you if
- Jeff Rogers
- Rensselaer Polytechnic institute
- rogerj@rpi.edu
-
- >Consider a metallic slide with 10 large holes in it equally spaced from
- >top to bottom. If you attempt to slide down the slide you have a 50%
- >probability of sliding through each hole in the slide into an oleaginous
- >substance beneath the slide during each encounter with a hole.
- >
- >1. If you were a gambling person, which hole would you bet a person
- >would fall through?
-
- The first one. There's only a 50% chance of them getting past it, and a
- small chance of them falling into each succeeding hole.
- hole # percent chance of reaching and falling into
- 1 50
- 2 25
- 3 12.5
- 4 6.25
- 5 3.125
- 6 1.5625
- 7 0.78125
- 8 0.390625
- 9 0.1953125
- 10 0.09765625
-
- >
- >2. If you were a gambling person, how many attempts would it require
- >for a person to slide from the top of the slide to the bottom without
- >falling through a single hole.
-
- The chances for reaching each succeeding hole are the same as reaching and
- falling into the previous one. Therefore, the chances of passing all the
- holes are the same as reaching and falling into the last hole (see previous
- answer for stats), which makes the probability .0009765625, so
- statistically, 1024 slides would be required to guarantee reaching the
- bottom. If I was a gambling person, I'd probably bet about half this,
- because the actual events can happen in any order, and on average, I'd guess
- that he'd get down in about 512 slides.
-
- >
- >3. If all the people on earth lined up to go down the slide, and they
- >slid down a more horrifying slide with 100 holes at a rate of 1 person
- >per second, when would you expect the first person to arrive at the
- >bottom of the slide without falling through.
- >An hour? A day? A decade? ...
-
- This is solved similarly; it is represented by powers of 2. To successfully
- get past the last hole, it would require (statistically, at least) 2^100
- or (by my trusty pocket calculator) 1.2676506 *10^30 slides.
- More significant figures? dc! Which gives 1267650600228229401496703205376.
- In similar logic as the last problem, I'd expect about half that, or
- 633825300114114700748351602688 slides. How much time would this be? Excluding
- leap years, I calculate 20098468420665737593491 years. That's 20 sextillion
- years, significantly more than the age of the universe, by about 11 orders
- of magnitude. So I'd guess that no one will ever reach the bottom, they'll
- all try and fail (assuming everyone only gets to go once), or die waiting in
- line.
-
- Diversion
-
- --
- "I can see 'em | "Want me to create a diversion?"
- I can see 'em | Diversion
- Someone wake me when it's over" | rogerj@rpi.edu
- -------------------------
-
- In article <1992Oct23.160130.166012@watson.ibm.com> you write:
- Title: Cliff Puzzle 12: Slides in Hell
- >Consider a metallic slide with 10 large holes in it equally spaced from
- >top to bottom. If you attempt to slide down the slide you have a 50%
- >probability of sliding through each hole in the slide into an
- >oleaginous substance beneath the slide during each encounter with a
- >hole.
- >
- >1. If you were a gambling person, which hole would you bet a person
- >would fall through?
-
- None. The best chance is the first hole but I got a 50-50 chance. Why
- bother? (2nd hole is 1/4, 3rd 2**-3, ...)
-
- >2. If you were a gambling person, how many attempts would it require
- >for a person to slide from the top of the slide to the bottom without
- >falling through a single hole.
-
- No gurantee. Each slide is an independent event. Now, if you are
- talking mere probability, on the average, one in 1024 slides may make
- it through all 10 holes.
-
- >3. If all the people on earth lined up to go down the slide, and they
- >slid down a more horrifying slide with 100 holes at a rate of 1 person
- >per second, when would you expect the first person to arrive at the
- >bottom of the slide without falling through. An hour? A day? A decade?
-
- Again, can't tell. It could be the first one, it could be none. Probablity
- can not foretell actual events. But if you have infinite number of people
- sliding down till eternity, on the average, you may see 1 person slide over
- all holes every (2**100)/(365*24*69*6) years. This number is many times
- bigger than the world population for now.
- -------------------------
-
- Some answers to your questions:
-
- 1. As the puzzle states there is a 50% chance of falling into each
- hole, I would bet a person would fall into the first hole -- in a large
- enough sample, 1/2 of the people will fall through the first hole, 1/4
- through the second, 1/8 through the third, etc.
-
- 2. In a large sample, 1/(2^10) people would make it all the way down
- the slide without falling through any of the holes (1/1024). This means
- that 1023 out of 1024 people would fall through a hole. Using the
- formula (1023/1024)^x=1/2, we can determine out of the first x people
- to go down the slide, there is a 50% chance that one person will make
- it down without falling through a hole. The answer to this equation is
- x=709.4 Thus I would bet that a person would make it all the way down
- on one of the first 710 attempts.
-
- 3. As 2^100=1.2676*10^30 (roughly), and (including leaps years under
- the Gregorian calendar) there are 31556952 seconds in the average year,
- then statistically one person should make it down the slide every
- 4.017*10^22 YEARS. However, and this is a very rough estimate, I figure
- the log of (1-1/(1.2676*10^30)) to be about -5.5*10^(-29). [I'm doing
- the calculations on a scientific calculator which only has 10 places.]
- Thus, using the formula xlog(1-1/2^100)=log(1/2), I get x=5.5*10^27.
- Thus, there's about a 50% chance that after 5.5*10^27 seconds, someone
- will have made it down the slide. To be on the safe side, I'd bet only
- if I were given at least 6*10^27 seconds, a value which equals
- 1.901*10^20 YEARS.
-
- I hope this answers the questions.
-
- Ted Schuerzinger
-
- email: J.Theodore.Schuerzinger@Dartmouth.EDU
- snailmail: HB 3819
- Dartmouth College
- Hanover, NH 03755
- USA
-
- In case you're wondering, I'm just a junior at Dartmouth who's
- interested in puzzles like these. I'm not even a math major -- I'm a
- double major in government and Russian.
- -------------------------
-
- In article <1992Oct23.160130.166012@watson.ibm.com> you write:
- >Title: Cliff Puzzle 12: Slides in Hell
- >From: cliff@watson.ibm.com
-
- >Consider a metallic slide with 10 large holes in it equally spaced from
- >top to bottom. If you attempt to slide down the slide you have a 50%
- >probability of sliding through each hole in the slide into an oleaginous
- >substance beneath the slide during each encounter with a hole.
- >
- >1. If you were a gambling person, which hole would you bet a person
- >would fall through?
-
- There's a 50% chance of falling through the first hole, 25% the
- second, 2^-n the n'th. If the odds offered were the same, I'd go for
- the first hole.
-
- >2. If you were a gambling person, how many attempts would it require
- >for a person to slide from the top of the slide to the bottom without
- >falling through a single hole.
-
- You expect to make it 1 out of 1024 times; after 710 tries, the chance
- of someone succeeding exceeds 1/2. (Log base (1023/1024) of 1/2 is
- 709.4).
-
- >3. If all the people on earth lined up to go down the slide, and they
- >slid down a more horrifying slide with 100 holes at a rate of 1 person
- >per second, when would you expect the first person to arrive at the
- >bottom of the slide without falling through.
- >An hour? A day? A decade? ...
-
- Never. OK, 1/2^100 will make it. There being under 2^33 people on
- the planet, ...
-
- After 4.2e22 years, the expected number of people who succeeded is 1;
- after about 2.9e22 years, the chance of someone having succeeded is
- about 1/2.
-
- Like I said, never.
-
- Seth sethb@fid.morgan.com
- -------------------------
-
- In rec.puzzles you write:
-
- >1. If you were a gambling person, which hole would you bet a person
- >would fall through?
-
- If the pay-back odds were the same regardless of the hole, then obviously,
- I'd bet on the first hole! There's a 1:2 chance the person falls through
- the first hole, a 1:4 combined chance of the person falling though the
- second hole, etc...
-
- >2. If you were a gambling person, how many attempts would it require
- >for a person to slide from the top of the slide to the bottom without
- >falling through a single hole.
-
- 1024 is the median value for this case... There's a 1:2**n chance of
- a person falling through the nth hole, having missed all of the holes
- before n. Since the probability of falling through = the probability
- passing over the hole safely (vs not ever getting there), the
- probability that a person makes it to the end is also 1:1024.
-
-
- >3. If all the people on earth lined up to go down the slide, and they
- >slid down a more horrifying slide with 100 holes at a rate of 1 person
- >per second, when would you expect the first person to arrive at the
- >bottom of the slide without falling through.
- >An hour? A day? A decade? ...
- There is a 1:2**(100-Log2(5 billion people)) chance that somebody makes
- it through... Given a finite # of people on the planet (approx 5 bil.)
- I think we'll run out first...
-
-
- --Joseph Zbiciak im14u2c@camelot.bradley.edu
-
-
- -------------------------
-
- Subject: Re: Cliff Puzzle 12: Slides in Hell (SPOILER)
- Newsgroups: rec.puzzles
- References: <1992Oct23.160130.166012@watson.ibm.com>
-
- In article <1992Oct23.160130.166012@watson.ibm.com>, Cliff Pickover writes:
-
- > Consider a metallic slide with 10 large holes in it equally spaced from
- > top to bottom. If you attempt to slide down the slide you have a 50%
- > probability of sliding through each hole in the slide into an oleaginous
- > substance beneath the slide during each encounter with a hole.
-
- > 1. If you were a gambling person, which hole would you bet a person
- > would fall through?
-
- The probability of falling into hole i is (1/2)^i, so your best bet
- would be hole 1.
-
- > 2. If you were a gambling person, how many attempts would it require
- > for a person to slide from the top of the slide to the bottom without
- > falling through a single hole.
-
- The probability of success is p = (1/2)^10, and as each trial is
- independant the expected number of trials before success is 1/p or
- 2^10.
-
- > 3. If all the people on earth lined up to go down the slide, and they
- > slid down a more horrifying slide with 100 holes at a rate of 1 person
- > per second, when would you expect the first person to arrive at the
- > bottom of the slide without falling through.
-
- In this case the number of expected trials is 2^100, which is much
- larger than the total number of people.
-
- > An hour? A day? A decade? ...
-
- Try about 10^24 years. As another problem, assuming a large enough
- supply of sliders estimate when the slide will wear through from
- friction.
- -------------------------
-
- In article <1992Oct23.160130.166012@watson.ibm.com> you write:
- >Title: Cliff Puzzle 12: Slides in Hell
- >From: cliff@watson.ibm.com
- >
- >If you respond to this puzzle, if possible please send me your name,
- >address, affiliation, e-mail address, so I can properly credit you if
- >you provide unique information. PLEASE ALSO directly mail me a copy of
- >your response in addition to any responding you do in the newsgroup. I
- >will assume it is OK to describe your answer in any article or
- >publication I may write in the future, with attribution to you, unless
- >you state otherwise. Thanks, Cliff Pickover
- >
- > * * *
- >
- >Consider a metallic slide with 10 large holes in it equally spaced from
- >top to bottom. If you attempt to slide down the slide you have a 50%
- >probability of sliding through each hole in the slide into an oleaginous
- >substance beneath the slide during each encounter with a hole.
- >
- >1. If you were a gambling person, which hole would you bet a person
- >would fall through?
-
- I'd bet that they fell through the first hole. The probability of that
- happening is 50%. The probability of them falling through the second
- hole is:
- P(didn't fall through the first)*P(fell through the second) = 50%*50% = 25%
-
- In general, P(falls through hole n)=
- P(no fall through 1)*P(no fall through 2)*...*P(no fall through n-1)
- *P(fell through hole n).
- For this problem, P(falls through hole n) is (50%)^n, where n is the hole #
- from the top.
-
- >2. If you were a gambling person, how many attempts would it require
- >for a person to slide from the top of the slide to the bottom without
- >falling through a single hole.
-
- (Hey, after the first failed attempt, they're screwed, no?)
- P(success)=P(no fail)=P(no fall 1)P(no fall 2)...P(no fall 10)
- =50%^10
- =1/1024
- They should make it at least one time in 1024.
-
- >3. If all the people on earth lined up to go down the slide, and they
- >slid down a more horrifying slide with 100 holes at a rate of 1 person
- >per second, when would you expect the first person to arrive at the
- >bottom of the slide without falling through.
- >An hour? A day? A decade? ...
-
- Oh, one in about 4.02*10^22 years... I wouldn't hold my breath.
-
-
- -Richard
- -------------------------
-
- 1. I would bet on the first hole, as there is a 0.5 probability of a person's
- falling into it, which is the highest such probability.
-
- 2. The probability of reaching the end of the slide on a particular try is
- 1/2^10 = 1/1024. In 709 tries, there is an approximately 0.5 probability of
-
- 3. Beats me - the even money bet is for a number of tries (approximately) equal
- ((2^100 - 1)/(2^100))
- calculate it.
-
-
-
- --
- _______________________________________________________________________
- Dan Blum Institute for the Learning Sciences Room 327
- blum@ils.nwu.edu 1890 Maple Ave., Evanston, IL 60201 708-467-2306
-
- "Let it be granted that a controversy may be raised about any question,
- and at any distance from that question."
- Lewis Carroll
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
-
- ==> pickover/pickover.13.p <==
- Title: Cliff Puzzle 13: Ladders to Heaven
- From: cliff@watson.ibm.com
-
- If you respond to this puzzle, if possible please send me your name,
- address, affiliation, e-mail address, so I can properly credit you if
- you provide unique information. PLEASE ALSO directly mail me a copy of
- your response in addition to any responding you do in the newsgroup. I
- will assume it is OK to describe your answer in any article or
- publication I may write in the future, with attribution to you, unless
- you state otherwise. Thanks, Cliff Pickover
-
- * * *
-
- Consider the following scenario. A standard ladder stretches from each
- country on the earth upward a distance equal to the distance from the
- earth to the moon.
-
- Assume:
- 1. the ladder is made out of a strong metal such as
- titanium, which will not break.
- 2. the ladder is inclined at a very steep angle, 70 degrees, for
- each country.
- 3. there is a breathable atmosphere.
- 4. the people (or teams of people) are allowed to use standard
- mountain climbing and camping gear, e.g. ropes, backpacks, etc. but not
- sophisticated electrical mechanisms, engines, etc.
- 5. a reward is given to whomever reaches the top of the ladder
- first: 1 million dollars to that person. In addition the country's
- national debt is wiped out.
-
- Questions:
- 1. Approximate how long it would take a person (or team of people) to
- reach the top of the ladder. Days? Weeks? Years?
-
- 2. Which country would be the first?
-
- 3. Is there any novel method you would suggest to achieve this goal?
-
- 4. Is this task impossible to carry out.
-
- ==> pickover/pickover.13.s <==
- -------------------------
-
- Interesting puzzle... Just one question though: Is there a moon,
- i.e. is it possible to use the gravitational field of the moon to your
- advantage by "falling upwards" once you have reached the point where
- the moon's gravity is bigger than the erath's (and do we also assume that
- the the climber(s) must survive the fall?? :-) or shall we assume that the
- earth is alone in the universe?
-
-
- Spyros Potamianos
- potamian@hpl.hp.com
- -------------------------
-
- Newsgroups: rec.puzzles
- Subject: Re: Cliff Puzzle 13: Ladders to Heaven
- References: <1992Oct23.193252.108077@watson.ibm.com>
- Organization: The Chrome Plated Megaphone of Destiny
-
- >1. Approximate how long it would take a person (or team of people) to
- >reach the top of the ladder. Days? Weeks? Years?
-
- Note that after you're 22,300 miles from the earth's axis, you get to
- "fall" the rest of the way, as long as you don't lose contact with
- the ladder.
-
- >2. Which country would be the first?
-
- It has already been pointed out that countries on the equator have an
- advantage. I suppose you could consider that countries with a large
- national debt have extra motivation. :-)
-
- >3. Is there any novel method you would suggest to achieve this goal?
-
- I would suggest a bicycle-like vehicle clamped to the ladder. By
- pulling a light but strong rope on a pulley (perhaps obtained form
- the same source as this fantastic ladder material), riders could be
- changed fairly quickly, thanks to a crew of brawny pulley-pullers
- with a variable-geared linkage to the rope.
-
- For the rider to pull this ever-longer rope seems impossible, but I
- think shorter segments could be lifted and linked. Or the ground
- crew could help the rider by pulling down rope from a hub of lesser
- diameter than the wheels of the vehicle.
-
- >4. Is this task impossible to carry out.
-
- No. I thought it might be impossible to halt at the far end of the
- ladder and return, due to centrifugal acceleration, but that
- acceleration turns out to be only about 5 cm/s^2.
- __________________________________________________________
- Matt Crawford matt@severian.chi.il.us Java Man
-
-
- -------------------------
-
- > How do we get food to the people?
-
- I would have the riders change so often that they'd only need some
- high-carbohydrate snacks and a couple quarts of fluid. I think the
- brawny ground crew could pull up the next rider, with his supplies
- and another pulley and segment of rope, at an acceleration of about
- 0.5 g or better. That would be under 90 minutes for each shift-
- change up to the synchronous orbit level.
-
- I haven't figured out yet how to link each new piece of rope that's
- pulled up with a rider to the pulley that's at the high point reached
- by the previous rider. Linking is easy, but it would be nice to find
- a way that lets the next pulled-up rider go from one segment to the
- other without interruption. Well, since the sky-buckets at
- Disneyland do this trick at each end, I know it can be done.
-
- I didn't know you'd written any books, but it was clear you're
- working on one now. Sure, send a list, but I have access to some
- on-line catalogs, so maybe I can find them anyway.
-
- Matt Crawford
- -------------------------
-
- > Consider the following scenario. A standard ladder stretches from each
- > country on the earth upward a distance equal to the distance from the
- > earth to the moon.
- >
- > Assume:
- > 1. the ladder is made out of a strong metal such as
- > titanium, which will not break.
- > 2. the ladder is inclined at a very steep angle, 70 degrees, for
- > each country.
- > 3. there is a breathable atmosphere.
- > 4. the people (or teams of people) are allowed to use standard
- > mountain climbing and camping gear, e.g. ropes, backpacks, etc. but not
- > sophisticated electrical mechanisms, engines, etc.
- > 5. a reward is given to whomever reaches the top of the ladder
- > first: 1 million dollars to that person. In addition the country's
- > national debt is wiped out.
-
- I would imagine that one would be able to fashion a hot air balloon given
- condition 4. Also, given condition 3, the hot air balloon would be able
- to cover the entire distance. One would then only need to attach a sliding
- hookup between the ladder and the balloon and wait.
-
- ===M.Graf==graf@island.com==================================================
-
-
- ==> pickover/pickover.14.p <==
- Title: Cliff Puzzle 14: Geography Genuflection
- From: cliff@watson.ibm.com
-
- If you respond to this puzzle, if possible please send me your name,
- address, affiliation, e-mail address, so I can properly credit you if
- you provide unique information. PLEASE ALSO directly mail me a copy of
- your response in addition to any responding you do in the newsgroup. I
- will assume it is OK to describe your answer in any article or
- publication I may write in the future, with attribution to you, unless
- you state otherwise. Thanks, Cliff Pickover
-
- * * *
-
- 1. How would the world be different today, geopolitically speaking, if
- the ancient land masses had never drifted apart and, therefore,
- today's world consisted of a single supercontintent?
-
- 2. What would today's world be like if the land mass which formed the
- Greek peninsula never existed?
-
- 3. What would today's world be like if the land bridge which joined
- Alaska to Asia never existed?
-
- 4. Why do all the major peninsulas on earth point south? See for
- example: Italy, Greece, Florida, and Baja, and the tips of Africa,
- South America, India, Norway, Sweden, Greenland, and many other
- landmasses.
-
- ==> pickover/pickover.14.s <==
- -------------------------
-
- In rec.puzzles you write:
-
- >If you respond to this puzzle, if possible please send me your name,
- >address, affiliation, e-mail address, so I can properly credit you if
- >you provide unique information.
- >
- Mike Neergaard
- University of Wisconsin
- neergaar@math.wisc.edu
-
- I'm not a professional at this sort of thing, so I just summarized my
- conclusions. I'm sure they would be ripped to shreds by any competent
- whatsit-type-individual-who-knows-all-about-this-kind-of-stuff.
-
- >1. How would the world be different today, geopolitically speaking, if
- >the ancient land masses had never drifted apart and, therefore,
- >today's world consisted of a single supercontintent?
- We would all speak German.
-
- >2. What would today's world be like if the land mass which formed the
- >Greek peninsula never existed?
- >
- We would know a low more about fluid dynamics.
-
- >3. What would today's world be like if the land bridge which joined
- >Alaska to Asia never existed?
- Christopher Columbus would be a national hero, instead of being vulnerable
- to counter-claims of genocide. America would have been settled several
- decades later, due to a dearth of demonstrable natural resources.
-
- >4. Why do all the major peninsulas on earth point south? See for
- >example: Italy, Greece, Florida, and Baja, and the tips of Africa,
- >South America, India, Norway, Sweden, Greenland, and many other
- >landmasses.
- I just work here . . .
- --
- I really don't make any claim at all to know what I'm talking about.
- Actually, I make no claim to know what YOU'RE talking about, either.
- In fact, now I've forgotten what we were talking about . . .
-
- -------------------------
-
- In article <1992Oct26.140330.142282@watson.ibm.com> you write:
- >Title: Cliff Puzzle 14: Geography Genuflection
- >From: cliff@watson.ibm.com
- >
- >If you respond to this puzzle, if possible please send me your name,
- >address, affiliation, e-mail address, so I can properly credit you if
- >you provide unique information. PLEASE ALSO directly mail me a copy of
- >your response in addition to any responding you do in the newsgroup. I
- >will assume it is OK to describe your answer in any article or
- >publication I may write in the future, with attribution to you, unless
- >you state otherwise. Thanks, Cliff Pickover
- >
- > * * *
- >
-
- Okay, administrative trivia first. My name is Martin Eiger, you don't
- need my address (home or business?), I don't want you citing my
- affiliation if you quote me, and my e-mail address is
- mie@thumper.bellcore.com.
-
- >1. How would the world be different today, geopolitically speaking, if
- >the ancient land masses had never drifted apart and, therefore,
- >today's world consisted of a single supercontintent?
-
- My theory is that mankind would never have evolved. The dominant
- species would still be some sort of mammal, but not us. This renders
- a large number of geopolitical questions irrelevant. For example,
- elephant-like creatures are unlikely to care whether there is one or
- two Germanys.
-
-
- >2. What would today's world be like if the land mass which formed the
- >Greek peninsula never existed?
-
- A tough one, since I'm not up on my Greek influences in the evolution
- of civilization. My guess is that civilization would have evolved
- anyway, probably not too differently than it did. It might not have
- evolved as fast, i.e., we might now be where we were a thousand years
- ago or so, but over the long haul, human history would follow a
- similar course.
-
-
- >3. What would today's world be like if the land bridge which joined
- >Alaska to Asia never existed?
-
- Pretty much the same, I bet. People would have colonized North
- America anyway. After all, they got to Hawaii, so somebody could
- probably have gotten to North America. And whether or not people
- colonized North America from across the Pacific, people from Europe
- would have paved the place over just the same.
-
-
- >4. Why do all the major peninsulas on earth point south? See for
- >example: Italy, Greece, Florida, and Baja, and the tips of Africa,
- >South America, India, Norway, Sweden, Greenland, and many other
- >landmasses.
-
- First of all, you have to define what's a major peninsula. Secondly,
- I don't like your list. Norway and Sweden are on the same peninsula,
- and Greenland is an island, not a peninsula. And third, there are
- plenty of perfectly fine peninsulas that don't point south: Alaska,
- Siberia, Michigan (two peninsulas for the price of one), Yucatan,
- Arabia (points kind of southeast), and Iberia, for instance. And
- fourth, you missed a few good southern-pointing ones, such as Korea,
- Crimea, the Sinai, and the one that kind of points from eastern
- Siberia toward Japan that I'm sure has a name but I don't know it. So
- while there are lots of peninsulas pointing lots of directions, a
- majority of them do seem to point south, and I have no idea why.
-
- ==> pickover/pickover.15.p <==
- Title: Cliff Puzzle 15: Cherries in Wine Glasses
- From: cliff@watson.ibm.com
-
- If you respond to this puzzle, if possible please send me your name,
- address, affiliation, e-mail address, so I can properly credit you if
- you provide unique information. PLEASE ALSO directly mail me a copy of
- your response in addition to any responding you do in the newsgroup. I
- will assume it is OK to describe your answer in any article or
- publication I may write in the future, with attribution to you, unless
- you state otherwise. Thanks, Cliff Pickover
-
- * * *
-
- Consider a 9x9 grid of beautiful crystal wineglasses. Throw 32 cherries
- at the grid. A glass is considered occupied if it contains at least one
- cherry. (With each throw a cherry goes into one of the glasses.) How
- many different patterns of occupied glasses can you make? (A glass with
- more than one cherry is considered the same as a glass with one cherry
- in the pattern).
-
- 2. Same as above except that you place 8 cherries in glasses (x,y) and
- then determine the other positions by placing cherries at (x,-y),
- (-x,y), (-x,-y) leading to 32 cherries in the grid. Consider the array
- of glasses centered at the origin. How many different patterns of
- occupied glasses can you make? (A glass with more than one cherry is
- considered the same as a glass with one cherry in the pattern).
-
- 3. Can your results be extrapolated to an NxN grid with M cherries
- thrown at it for both problems?
-
-
- ==> pickover/pickover.15.s <==
- In article <1992Oct30.173903.108937@watson.ibm.com> you write:
- : Consider a 9x9 grid of beautiful crystal wineglasses. Throw 32 cherries
- : at the grid. A glass is considered occupied if it contains at least one
- : cherry. (With each throw a cherry goes into one of the glasses.) How
- : many different patterns of occupied glasses can you make? (A glass with
- : more than one cherry is considered the same as a glass with one cherry
- : in the pattern).
- Assuming that rotated patterns are allowed, then it is (simply)
- sum( 81!/(81-n)! , n=1->32) . Since, if a total of n different classes are
- filled, then the number of combinations is 81!/(81-n)!. Since there can
- be from 1 to 32 glasses filled, the total # is just the sum of these...
-
- :
- : 2. Same as above except that you place 8 cherries in glasses (x,y) and
- : then determine the other positions by placing cherries at (x,-y),
- : (-x,y), (-x,-y) leading to 32 cherries in the grid. Consider the array
- : of glasses centered at the origin. How many different patterns of
- : occupied glasses can you make? (A glass with more than one cherry is
- : considered the same as a glass with one cherry in the pattern).
- This limitation basically reduces the number of available spots, from 9x9
- to 5x5. Also, I only have to worry about 8 occupied spaces. Soo...
- #of comb. = sum( (25!/(25-n)!, n=1->8)
- :
- : 3. Can your results be extrapolated to an NxN grid with M cherries
- : thrown at it for both problems?
- With a odd N, and M = 4k (evenly divs by 4), then
- for 1....
- #of comb = sum( (N^2)!/(N^2-n)! , n=1->M)
- for 2....
- #of comb = sum( (((N+1)/2)^2)!/(((N+1)/2)^2-n)! , n=1->M/4)
-
- --
- Michael Neylon aka Masem the Great and Almighty Thermodynamics GOD!
- // | Senior, Chemical Engineering, Univ. of Toledo
- \\ // Only the | Summer Intern, NASA Lewis Research Center
- \ \X/ AMIGA! | mneylon@jupiter.cse.utoledo.edu /
- --------+ How do YOU spell 'potato'? How 'bout 'lousy'? +----------
- "Me and Spike are big Malcolm 10 supporters." - J.S.,P.L.C.L
-
- ==> pickover/pickover.16.p <==
- Title: Cliff Puzzle 16: Undulating Squares
- From: cliff@watson.ibm.com
-
- If you respond to this puzzle, if possible please send me your name,
- address, affiliation, e-mail address, so I can properly credit you if
- you provide unique information. PLEASE ALSO directly mail me a copy of
- your response in addition to any responding you do in the newsgroup. I
- will assume it is OK to describe your answer in any article or
- publication I may write in the future, with attribution to you, unless
- you state otherwise. Thanks, Cliff Pickover
-
- * * *
-
- A square number is of the form y=x**2. For example, 25 is a square
- number.
-
- Undulating numbers are of the form: ababababab... For example, the
- following are undulating numbers: 1717171, 282828, etc.
-
- 1. Are there any undulating square numbers?
-
- 2. Are there any undulating cube numbers?
-
-
- ==> pickover/pickover.16.s <==
- -------------------------
-
- In article <1992Oct30.175102.142177@watson.ibm.com> you write:
- : 1. Are there any undulating square numbers?
- 11^2 = 121
-
- : 2. Are there any undulating cube numbers?
- 7^3 = 343
-
- (yes, I know they're short, but they qualify!)
-
- --
- Michael Neylon aka Masem the Great and Almighty Thermodynamics GOD!
- // | Senior, Chemical Engineering, Univ. of Toledo
- \\ // Only the | Summer Intern, NASA Lewis Research Center
- \ \X/ AMIGA! | mneylon@jupiter.cse.utoledo.edu /
- --------+ How do YOU spell 'potato'? How 'bout 'lousy'? +----------
- "Me and Spike are big Malcolm 10 supporters." - J.S.,P.L.C.L
- -------------------------
-
- In article <1992Oct30.204134.97881@watson.ibm.com> you write:
- >Hi, I was interested in non-trivial cases. Those with greater
- >than 3 digits. Award goes to the person who finds the largest
- >undulating square or cube number. Thanks, Cliff
-
- 343 and 676 aren't trivial (unlike 121 and 484 it doesn't come from
- obvious algebraic identities). The chance that a "random"
- number around x should be a perfect square is about 1/sqrt(x);
- more generally, x^(-1+1/d) for a perfect d-th power. Since
- there are for each k only 90 k-digit undulants you expect
- to find only finitely many of these that are perfect powers,
- and none that are very large. But provably listing all cases
- is probably only barely, if at all, possible by present-day
- methods for treating exponential Diophantine equations, unless
- (as was shown in a rec.puzzles posting re your puzzles on
- arith. prog. of squares with common difference 10^k) there is
- some ad-hoc trick available. At any rate the largest undulating
- power is probably 69696=264^2, though 211^3=9393931 comes
- remarkably close.
-
- --Noam D. Elkies
- -------------------------
-
- In article <1992Oct30.175102.142177@watson.ibm.com>, you write...
- >1. Are there any undulating square numbers?
- >
- Other than the obvious 11**2, 22**2, and 26**2, there is 264**2
- which equals 69696.
-
- >2. Are there any undulating cube numbers?
- >
- Just 7**3 as far as I can tell, though I'm limited to IEEE computational
- reals.
-
- PauL M SchwartZ (-Z-) | Follow men's eyes as they look to the skies
- v206gb6c@ubvms.BitNet | the shifting shafts of shining
- pms@geog.buffalo.edu | weave the fabric of their dreams
- pms@acsu.buffalo.edu | - RUSH -
-
-
- ==> pickover/pickover.17.p <==
- Title: Cliff Puzzle 17: Weird Recursive Sequence
- From: cliff@watson.ibm.com
-
- If you respond to this puzzle, if possible please send me your name,
- address, affiliation, e-mail address, so I can properly credit you if
- you provide unique information. PLEASE ALSO directly mail me a copy of
- your response in addition to any responding you do in the newsgroup. I
- will assume it is OK to describe your answer in any article or
- publication I may write in the future, with attribution to you, unless
- you state otherwise. Thanks, Cliff Pickover
-
- * * *
-
-
- Consider the simple yet weird recursive formula
-
- a(n) = a(a(n-1)) + a(n-a(n-1))
-
- The sequences starts with a(1) = 1, and a(2) = 1. The "future" values
- at higher values of n depend on past values in intricate recursive ways.
- Can you determined the third member of the sequence? At first, this may
- seem a little complicated to evaluate, but you can being slowly, by
- inserting values for n, as in the following:
-
- a(3) = a(a(2)) + a(3-a(2))
- a(3) = a(1) + a(3-1) =
- a(3) = 1+1 = 2
-
- Therefore, the 3rd value of the sequence a(3) is 2.
-
- The sequence a(n) seems simple enough: 1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 4, 4, 4, 5, ...
- Try computing a few additional numbers. Can you find any interesting
- patterns? The prolific mathematician John H Conway presented this
- recursive sequence at a recent talk entitled "Some Crazy Sequences." He
- noticed that the value a(n)/n approaches 1/2 as the sequence grows and n
- becomes larger. Can you find a value, N, above which the sequence the
- value of a(n)/n is always within 0.05 of the value 1/2? (In other
- words,
- .eq vbar a(n)/n -1/2 vbar lt 0.05.
- The bars indicate the absolute value.)
-
- A difficult problem? you ask.
- John Conway offered $10,000 to the person to find the s-m-a-l-l-e-s-t
- such N. A month after Conway made the offer, Colin Mallows of AT&T
- solved the $10,000 question: N = 3,173,375,556. Manfred Shroeder has
- noted that the sequence is "replete with appealing self-similarities
- that contain the clue to the problem's solution." Can you find any
- self-similarities? As I write this, no-one on the planet has found a
- value for the smallest N such that a(n)/n is always within 0.01 of the
- value 1/2.
- .eq (vbar a(n)/n -1/2 vbar lt 0.01. )
-
-
-
- ==> pickover/pickover.17.s <==
- -------------------------
-
- In article <1992Nov06.160358.101157@watson.ibm.com> you write:
- : Title: Cliff Puzzle 17: Weird Recursive Sequence
- : Consider the simple yet weird recursive formula
- : a(n) = a(a(n-1)) + a(n-a(n-1))
-
- The first 32 terms, and the ratio a(n)/n for each is as follows...
-
- n a(n) a(n)/n
- 1 1 1.0
- 2 1 1.0
- 3 2 .666
- 4 2 .5
- 5 3 .6
- 6 4 .666
- 7 4 .5714
- 8 4 .5
- 9 5 .5555
- 10 6 .6
- 11 7 .6363
- 12 7 .5833
- 13 8 .6153
- 14 8 .5714
- 15 8 .5333
- 16 8 .5
- 17 9 .5294
- 18 10 .5555
- 19 11 .5789
- 20 12 .6
- 21 12 .5714
- 22 13 .5909
- 23 14 .6086
- 24 14 .5833
- 25 15 .6
- 26 15 .5769
- 27 15 .5555
- 28 16 .5714
- 29 16 .5517
- 30 16 .5333
- 31 16 .5161
- 32 16 .5
- 33 17 .... and so and....
-
- off the top, we can see that on the 2^k (k a pos. int) terms, the
- ratio goes to .5
-
- between each of these, the ratio goes up and then drops back to .5
- (ignoring the variances due to integer arithmatic)
-
- the value of n at the maximum in each jump is halfway between the two
- 2^k points. The value of a(n) at those points seems to be
- 2^(k-1) - f(k), where f(k) is some function that I cannot determine
- without more computing power.... *sniff*
-
- Therefore, we must find a value of x such that...
- (2^(x-1)-f(x))/2^x - .5 <.05 (or whatever)
- or
- f(x)/2^x < .05
-
- and then N would be .5*(2^x-2^(x-1))
-
- if I could see the next terms up to 128, I might be able to calculate it...
-
-
- --
- Michael Neylon aka Masem the Great and Almighty Thermodynamics GOD!
- // | Senior, Chemical Engineering, Univ. of Toledo
- \\ // Only the | Summer Intern, NASA Lewis Research Center
- \ \X/ AMIGA! | mneylon@jupiter.cse.utoledo.edu /
- --------+ How do YOU spell 'potato'? How 'bout 'lousy'? +----------
- "Me and Spike are big Malcolm 10 supporters." - J.S.,P.L.C.L
- -------------------------
-
- In article <1992Nov06.160358.101157@watson.ibm.com> you write:
-
- >John Conway offered $10,000 to the person to find the s-m-a-l-l-e-s-t
- >such N. A month after Conway made the offer, Colin Mallows of AT&T
- >solved the $10,000 question: N = 3,173,375,556.
-
- As I pointed out in my posting, this is incorrect, and differs from
- Mallows' correct answer published in his article. But a bit of
- investigation shows that the above N is hardly a random guess, either.
- Conway's sequence is best understood by analyzing it on "levels",
- where the k'th level is the set of integers between 2^k and 2^(k+1).
- It turns out that Mallows' correct answer, 6083008742, lies on level 32,
- and the largest candidate answer on level 31 is N=3173375556, the
- number quoted above.
-
- Where did you see the above value of N given as the answer to Conway's
- question?
-
- -tal kubo@math.harvard.edu
-
- p.s. As I found out when I edited my posted response to your message,
- you either use lines longer than 80 characters in your postings,
- or else your editor appends extra linefeeds to each line. Since
- both conditions could be problematic for a lot of people who read
- your messages on rec.puzzles, you might want to correct this
- condition.
-
-
- ==> pickover/pickover.18.p <==
- Title: Cliff Puzzle 18: Difficult Nested Roots
- From: cliff@watson.ibm.com
-
- If you respond to this puzzle, if possible please send me your name,
- address, affiliation, e-mail address, so I can properly credit you if
- you provide unique information. PLEASE ALSO directly mail me a copy of
- your response in addition to any responding you do in the newsgroup. I
- will assume it is OK to describe your answer in any article or
- publication I may write in the future, with attribution to you, unless
- you state otherwise. Thanks, Cliff Pickover
-
- * * *
-
- Consider the following nested set of square roots.
-
- .eq ? = sqrt <1 + G sqrt <1+(G+1) sqrt < 1 + ... >>>
-
- Here, G indicates "Googol" or 10**100.
- The "<" and ">" symbols indicate where the beginning and ends of the
- the nested roots.
-
- 1. What is the value for in this infinite set of nested roots.
- 2. What is the next term under the root?
-
- Hint:
- In 1911, the famous mathematical prodigy Srinivasa Ramanujan posed the
- following question (#298) in a new mathematical journal called the
- :Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society.
-
- .eq ? = sqrt <1 + 2 sqrt <1+3 sqrt <1 + ... >>>
-
-
- ==> pickover/pickover.18.s <==
- -------------------------
-
- In article <1992Nov11.221749.129578@watson.ibm.com> you write:
- : Title: Cliff Puzzle 18: Difficult Nested Roots
- : From: cliff@watson.ibm.com
- : Consider the following nested set of square roots.
- :
- : ? = sqrt <1 + G sqrt <1+(G+1) sqrt < 1 + ... >>>
- :
- : Here, G indicates "Googol" or 10**100.
- : The "<" and ">" symbols indicate where the beginning and ends of the
- : the nested roots.
- :
- : 1. What is the value for in this infinite set of nested roots.
- : 2. What is the next term under the root?
- : Hint:
- : In 1911, a twenty-three-year-old Indian clerk named Srinivasa Ramanujan
- : posed the following question (#298) in a new mathematical journal called
- : the Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society.
- :
- : ? = sqrt <1 + 2 sqrt <1+3 sqrt <1 + ... >>>
- :
- Doing a n-depth thing-a-ding on this.....
- n=1 v=1
- 2 1.732
- 3 2.236
- 4 2.5598
- 5 2.7551
- 6 2.867
- ....
- 20 2.99999376
- ....
- so I expect that the sum is actually 3. Or in the general case when the
- 2 (or the G from above) is replaced by m, then the evaluation of the series
- is m+1. This CAN be shown as follows....
-
- m+1 = sqrt(1+m sqrt(1+(m+1)*sqrt(....))
- m^2 + 2m +1 = 1 + m *sqrt(1 + (m+1)*sqrt(...))
- m^2 + 2m = m*sqrt(1+(m+1)*sqrt(...))
- m+2 = sqrt(1+(m+1)*sqrt(1+(m+2)*sqrt(...))
-
- Thus if m+1 is then sum when the series is based off m, then m+2 is then
- sum when the series is based off m+1. Since this works for m=2 (as shown
- above), then it must work for all whole numbers (mathematical induction is
- such a wonderful thing...)
-
- Therefore, the sum with m=G is G+1.
-
- The next term, as show above, is (1+(m+2)*sqrt(1+....))
-
-
- --
- Michael Neylon aka Masem the Great and Almighty Thermodynamics GOD!
- // | Senior, Chemical Engineering, Univ. of Toledo
- \\ // Only the | Summer Intern, NASA Lewis Research Center
- \ \X/ AMIGA! | mneylon@jupiter.cse.utoledo.edu /
- --------+ How do YOU spell 'potato'? How 'bout 'lousy'? +----------
- "Me and Spike are big Malcolm 10 supporters." - J.S.,P.L.C.L
-
-