Fascinating Maths Facts continues...
11. We tend
to think of odd numbers as male and even numbers as female.
This ancient belief was tested by James Wilkie and Galen
Bodenhausen of Northwestern University. In his latest book, Alex Bellos writes: “They showed respondents randomly assigned pictures of
the faces of young babies, each next to a three-digit number that was either
odd-odd-odd or even-even-even, and asked them to guess the baby’s sex […]
Respondents were about 10 per cent more likely to say that a baby paired with
odd numbers was a boy, than if the same baby was paired with even numbers.”
12. If you
shuffle a pack of cards properly, chances are that exact order has never been
seen before in the whole history of the universe.
13. Zero is
an even number.
But people take longer to decide whether it’s even or odd because it’s not as easy for us to
mentally categorise.
14. There’s
not enough space in the known universe to write out a googolplex on paper.
According to Carl Sagan in the original Cosmos series. A
googolplex is 10 to the power of a googol, or 10 to the power of 10 to the
power of 100. This website will
write it out for you (or start… it won’t ever finish because your computer
won’t have enough memory).
15. The
most popular favourite number is 7.
Nearly 3000 people, around 10% of the total asked, chose 7 as
their favourite number in an online poll by
Alex Bellos. The second most popular was 3.
16. That
might be because 7 is “arithmetically unique”.
It’s the only number below 10 you can’t multiply or divide and
keep within group. For example, 5 you can multiply by 2 to get 10 (still within
the 1-10 group), 6 and 8 you can divide by 2.
17. 7 also
shows up a lot in human culture.
We have seven deadly sins, and seven wonders of the world. Not
to mention colours of the rainbow, pillars of wisdom, seas, dwarves, days in
the week…
This might be because when these things came about there were
celestial bodies visible in the sky (the Sun, the Moon, Venus, Mercury, Mars,
Jupiter and Saturn).
18. The
number 4 is considered unlucky in much of Asia.
That’s because the words for “four” in Japanese, Cantonese,
Mandarin and Korean (shi, sei, si, sa) sound the same as the words in those
languages for death.
19. .999999…
= 1
Here’s the proof:
If 10N = 9.9999…
Then N = .9999….
Subtract N from 10N, leaving you with 9N=9.
So then N=1. But we already know that N=.9999… as well.
So 1=.9999….
Then N = .9999….
Subtract N from 10N, leaving you with 9N=9.
So then N=1. But we already know that N=.9999… as well.
So 1=.9999….
20. Cicadas
use prime numbers as an evolutionary strategy.
Cicadas incubate underground for long periods of time – 13 or 17
years – before coming out to mate. 13 and 17 are both prime numbers. It’s
thought cicadas ended up in these prime number life-cycles because it meant
they came into contact with predators on more round numbered life-cycles less
often.
21. 10!
seconds is exactly 6 weeks.
10! means 10 factorial. 10! = 10 × 9 × 8 × 7 × 6 × 5 × 4 × 3 × 2
× 1 = 3628800 seconds. Which is 42 days, or 6 weeks, exactly.
22. Take
any four digit number, follow these steps, and you’ll end up with 6174.
1. Choose a four digit number (the only condition is that it has
at least two different digits).
2. Arrange the digits of the four digit number in descending then ascending order.
3. Subtract the smaller number from the bigger one.
4. Repeat.
2. Arrange the digits of the four digit number in descending then ascending order.
3. Subtract the smaller number from the bigger one.
4. Repeat.
Eventually you’ll end up at 6174, which is known as Kaprekar’s
constant. If you then repeat the process you’ll just keep getting 6174 over and
over again.
23. 555 is
used by some in Thailand as slang for “hahaha”, because the word for “five” is
pronounced “ha”.
by
Kelly Oakes
by
Kelly Oakes
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