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10-25-2012, 12:11 AM | #1 |
Doctor Wtf
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Badelaide, Baustralia
Posts: 12,861
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Recreational Mathematics
I think we have a full quorum of geeky nerds in here, so this thread might work.
Post your math(s) related ramblings here. Discuss, comment, dispute or drift at your discretion. I'll go first. So, a few nights back, unable to sleep, I tried counting sheep. I started getting turned on so I figured something different was needed. I had a little meander through mathematics and although I'm sure it is nothing new or revolutionary, it's mildly interesting so I'll share it here. I wondered, are there any numbers which are both cubes and squares? In the sense that 16 is square (4x4) and 27 is cubic (3x3x3). First I thought of 1,000,000 which is 100 cubed and 1,000 squared. Done. Then I started going through the squares to see if any were cubes. The first I found was 64, being 4 cubed or 8 squared. Then I noticed that 100 and 1,000 are in a 1:10 ratio, 4 and 8 are 1:2. I wondered, does 1:[any integer] deliver a cubic square? I tried 3 and 9, but that didn't work (3^3=27, 9^2=81). Then I tried 9 and 27. 9^3 and 27^2 both = 729. Ah, so it should work not with 4 and 16, but with 16 and 64. Yup, 4,096. By this time I saw the general pattern that was going on. Take a starting number, x. Square it, and let that be the number that gets cubed. Meanwhile, cube x, and let that result be the number which gets squared. x^2^3 = x^3^2 = cubic square. Also = x ^6, FTR. Well, of course, now that I see it. Take x, cube it, then square that, and the result will be a cubic square. Well, duh. It's kind of obvious once you see it, and that is the beauty of this kind of maths. I started with a question I wasn't sure about, and pretty soon, just by reasoning, had not just found an answer (yes) but had understood how these numbers worked, and had a formula for making as many as I want. Then, because I am actually a liberal arts graduate, I wrote a haiku about this. Are there cubic squares? The square of x cubed equals the cube of x squared. Final question for discussion: are there any cubic squares other than those described by the x^2^3 formula?
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