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#1 |
"Mike"
Aug 2002
798410 Posts |
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List a whole number... The next poster has to say what makes that whole number special, and then he or she has to list a new one... (Please be clever and please try not to cheat too much!)
Discussion about these numbers is encouraged, but keep the chain going! :) For example... 7 |
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#2 |
"Mike"
Aug 2002
24×499 Posts |
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7 wonders of the ancient world...
50 |
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#3 |
Jul 2003
Wuerzburg, Germany
810 Posts |
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50 States in the USA...
21 |
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#4 |
Aug 2002
2×101 Posts |
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21 Blackjack
6 |
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#5 |
"Sander"
Oct 2002
52.345322,5.52471
29·41 Posts |
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6 the first perfect number
9 |
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#6 |
Banned
"Luigi"
Aug 2002
Team Italia
12C216 Posts |
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9 first odd square.(after 1)
42 ;) |
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#7 |
Aug 2002
23×52 Posts |
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42 - Answer to the question of life, the universe, and everything.
101 |
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#8 |
Banned
"Luigi"
Aug 2002
Team Italia
480210 Posts |
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101 - dalmatians :D
101 - the first prime above 100 101 - the 101th Fibonacci number in binary notation 601 |
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#9 | |
∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
3·53·73 Posts |
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Beginning with just the smallest known prime, 2, we add one, to get 3, which is also prime. 2*3 + 1 = 7, which is again prime. The product of 2, 3 and 7 is 42. A more interesting question is: will such a Euclid-type inductive sequence eventually yield ALL the primes? For instance, if we continue the particular sequence above, we get: 2*3*7 + 1 = 43, which is again prime. 2*3*7*43 + 1 = 1807 = 13*139. 2*3*7*13*43*139 + 1 = 3263443, which is prime. 2*3*7*13*43*139*3263443 + 1 = 10650056950807 = 547*607*1033*31051. It's pretty easy to show that the Euclid sequence starting with 2 and 3 never yields a number divisible by 5, so the answer to the above question is no. So we refine the question: is there *any* Euclid sequence starting with a finite number of primes which yields all the primes? Either that, or 42 is Luigi's age. :) |
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#10 |
Cranksta Rap Ayatollah
Jul 2003
641 Posts |
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601 is the 110th prime, the divisors of 110 (sans 110) add up to 106, which is 601 backwards
539 |
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#11 | |
∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
101101010101112 Posts |
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http://www.hmso.gov.uk/si/si1995/Uksi_19950539_en_1.htm Isn't Google great? :D 5171655946 |
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