First published Monday, June 14, 2010
Freaky facts about 9 and 11
It's easy to come up with strange coincidences regarding the numbers 9 and 11. See, for example,
http://www.unexplained-mysteries.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=56447
How seriously you take such pecularities depends on your philosophical point of view. A typical scientist would respond that such coincidences are fairly likely by the fact that one can, with p/q the probability of an event, write (1-p/q)n, meaning that if n is large enough the probability is fairly high of "bizarre" classically independent coincidences.
But you might also think about Schroedinger's notorious cat, whose live-dead iffy state has yet to be accounted for by Einsteinian classical thinking, as I argue in this longish article:
http://www.angelfire.com/ult/znewz1/qball.html
Elsewhere I give a mathematical explanation of why any integer can be quickly tested to determine whether 9 or 11 is an aliquot divisor.
http://www.angelfire.com/az3/nfold/iJk.html
Here are some fun facts about divisibility by 9 or 11.
# If integers k and j both divide by 9, then the integer formed by stringing k and j together also divides by 9. One can string together as many integers divisible by 9 as one wishes to obtain that result.
Example:
27, 36, 45, 81 all divide by 9
In that case, 27364581 divides by 9 (and equals 3040509)
# If k divides by 9, then all the permutations of k's digit string form integers that divide by 9.
Example:
819/9 = 91
891/9 = 99
198/9 = 22
189/9 =21
918/9 = 102
981/9 = 109
# If an integer does not divide by 9, it is easy to form a new integer that does so by a simple addition of a digit.
This follows from the method of checking for factorability by 9. To wit, we add all the numerals, to see if they add to 9. If the sum exceeds 9, then those numerals are again added and this process is repeated as many times as necessary to obtain a single digit.
Example a.:
72936. 7 + 2 + 9 + 3 + 6 = 27. 2 + 7 = 9
Example b.:
Number chosen by random number generator:
37969. 3 + 7 + 9 + 6 + 9 = 34. 3 + 4 = 7
Hence, all we need do is include a 2 somewhere in the digit string.
372969/9 = 4144
Mystify your friends. Have them pick any string of digits (say 4) and then you silently calculate (it looks better if you don't use a calculator) to see whether the number divides by 9. If so, announce, "This number divides by 9." If not, announce the digit needed to make an integer divisible by 9 (2 in the case above) and then have your friend place that digit anywhere in the integer. Then announce, "This number divides by 9."
In the case of 11, doing tricks isn't quite so easy, but possible.
We check if a number divides by 11 by adding alternate digits as positive and negative. If the sum is zero, the number divides by 11. If the sum exceeds 9, we add the numerals with alternating signs, so that a sum 11 or 77 or the like, will zero out.
Let's check 5863.
We sum 5 - 8 + 6 - 3 = 0
So we can't scramble 5863 any way and have it divide by 11.
However, we can scramble the positively signed numbers or the negatively signed numbers how we please and find that the number divides by 11.
6358 = 11*578
We can also string numbers divisible by 11 together and the resulting integer is also divisible by 11.
253 = 11*23, 143 = 11*13
143253 = 11*13023
Now let's test this pseudorandom number:
70517. The sum of digits is 18 (making it divisible by 9).
We need to get a -18. So any digit string that sums to -18 will do. The easiest way to do that in this case is to replicate the integer and append it since each positive numeral is paired to its negative.
7051770517/11 = 641070047
Now let's do a pseudorandom 4-digit number:
4556. 4 - 5 + 5 - 6 = - 2. Hence 45562 must divide by 11 (obtaining 4142).
Sometimes another trick works.
5894. 5 - 8 + 9 - 4 = 2. So we need a -2, which, in this case can be had by appending 02, ensuring that 2 is found in the negative sum.
Check: 589402/11 = 53582
Let's play with 157311.
Positive digits are 1,7,1
Negative digits are 5, 3, 1
Positive permutations are
117, 711, 171
Negative permutations are
531, 513, 315, 351, 153, 135
So integers divisible by 11 are, for example:
137115 = 11*12465
711315 = 11*64665
Sizzlin' symmetry
There's just something about symmetry...
To form a number divisible by both 9 and 11, we play around thus:
Take a number, say 18279, divisible by 9. Note that it has an odd number of digits, meaning that its copy can be appended such that the resulting number 1827918279 yields a pattern pairing each positive digit with its negative, meaning we'll obtain a 0. Hence 1827918279/11 = 166174389 and that integer divided by 9 equals 20312031. Note that 18279/9 = 2031,
We can also write 1827997281/11 = 166181571 and that number divided by 9 equals 203110809.
Suppose the string contains an even number of digits. In that case, we can write say 18271827 and find it divisible by 9 (equaling 2030203). But it won't divide by 11 in that the positives pair with positive clones and so for negatives. This is resolved by using a 0 for the midpoint.
Thence 182701827/11 = 16609257. And, by the rules given above, 182701827 is divisible by 9, that number being 20300203.
Ah, wonderful symmetry.
http://www.unexplained-mysteries.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=56447
How seriously you take such pecularities depends on your philosophical point of view. A typical scientist would respond that such coincidences are fairly likely by the fact that one can, with p/q the probability of an event, write (1-p/q)n, meaning that if n is large enough the probability is fairly high of "bizarre" classically independent coincidences.
But you might also think about Schroedinger's notorious cat, whose live-dead iffy state has yet to be accounted for by Einsteinian classical thinking, as I argue in this longish article:
http://www.angelfire.com/ult/znewz1/qball.html
Elsewhere I give a mathematical explanation of why any integer can be quickly tested to determine whether 9 or 11 is an aliquot divisor.
http://www.angelfire.com/az3/nfold/iJk.html
Here are some fun facts about divisibility by 9 or 11.
# If integers k and j both divide by 9, then the integer formed by stringing k and j together also divides by 9. One can string together as many integers divisible by 9 as one wishes to obtain that result.
Example:
27, 36, 45, 81 all divide by 9
In that case, 27364581 divides by 9 (and equals 3040509)
# If k divides by 9, then all the permutations of k's digit string form integers that divide by 9.
Example:
819/9 = 91
891/9 = 99
198/9 = 22
189/9 =21
918/9 = 102
981/9 = 109
# If an integer does not divide by 9, it is easy to form a new integer that does so by a simple addition of a digit.
This follows from the method of checking for factorability by 9. To wit, we add all the numerals, to see if they add to 9. If the sum exceeds 9, then those numerals are again added and this process is repeated as many times as necessary to obtain a single digit.
Example a.:
72936. 7 + 2 + 9 + 3 + 6 = 27. 2 + 7 = 9
Example b.:
Number chosen by random number generator:
37969. 3 + 7 + 9 + 6 + 9 = 34. 3 + 4 = 7
Hence, all we need do is include a 2 somewhere in the digit string.
372969/9 = 4144
Mystify your friends. Have them pick any string of digits (say 4) and then you silently calculate (it looks better if you don't use a calculator) to see whether the number divides by 9. If so, announce, "This number divides by 9." If not, announce the digit needed to make an integer divisible by 9 (2 in the case above) and then have your friend place that digit anywhere in the integer. Then announce, "This number divides by 9."
In the case of 11, doing tricks isn't quite so easy, but possible.
We check if a number divides by 11 by adding alternate digits as positive and negative. If the sum is zero, the number divides by 11. If the sum exceeds 9, we add the numerals with alternating signs, so that a sum 11 or 77 or the like, will zero out.
Let's check 5863.
We sum 5 - 8 + 6 - 3 = 0
So we can't scramble 5863 any way and have it divide by 11.
However, we can scramble the positively signed numbers or the negatively signed numbers how we please and find that the number divides by 11.
6358 = 11*578
We can also string numbers divisible by 11 together and the resulting integer is also divisible by 11.
253 = 11*23, 143 = 11*13
143253 = 11*13023
Now let's test this pseudorandom number:
70517. The sum of digits is 18 (making it divisible by 9).
We need to get a -18. So any digit string that sums to -18 will do. The easiest way to do that in this case is to replicate the integer and append it since each positive numeral is paired to its negative.
7051770517/11 = 641070047
Now let's do a pseudorandom 4-digit number:
4556. 4 - 5 + 5 - 6 = - 2. Hence 45562 must divide by 11 (obtaining 4142).
Sometimes another trick works.
5894. 5 - 8 + 9 - 4 = 2. So we need a -2, which, in this case can be had by appending 02, ensuring that 2 is found in the negative sum.
Check: 589402/11 = 53582
Let's play with 157311.
Positive digits are 1,7,1
Negative digits are 5, 3, 1
Positive permutations are
117, 711, 171
Negative permutations are
531, 513, 315, 351, 153, 135
So integers divisible by 11 are, for example:
137115 = 11*12465
711315 = 11*64665
Sizzlin' symmetry
There's just something about symmetry...
To form a number divisible by both 9 and 11, we play around thus:
Take a number, say 18279, divisible by 9. Note that it has an odd number of digits, meaning that its copy can be appended such that the resulting number 1827918279 yields a pattern pairing each positive digit with its negative, meaning we'll obtain a 0. Hence 1827918279/11 = 166174389 and that integer divided by 9 equals 20312031. Note that 18279/9 = 2031,
We can also write 1827997281/11 = 166181571 and that number divided by 9 equals 203110809.
Suppose the string contains an even number of digits. In that case, we can write say 18271827 and find it divisible by 9 (equaling 2030203). But it won't divide by 11 in that the positives pair with positive clones and so for negatives. This is resolved by using a 0 for the midpoint.
Thence 182701827/11 = 16609257. And, by the rules given above, 182701827 is divisible by 9, that number being 20300203.
Ah, wonderful symmetry.
No comments:
Post a Comment