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  • ROUND 153

    http://www.thesnookerforum.com/photo...ndex.php?n=275


    Hello all, I'll close Round 153 - had a correct answer from snookersfun and a good guess from monique.

    The image is a type of mathematical image known as Ulams prime spiral. If you start numbering from the centre and spiral outwards:

    16 15 14 13
    5 4 3 12
    6 1 2 11
    7 8 9 10

    Then highlight any prime numbers you end up with the above pattern. It isn't as random as would be expected. Continue up until about 160,000 and you will get this image.

    http://mathworld.wolfram.com/images/gifs/primesp.gif


    The image that I posted on this thread starts numbering from the center at 41 and has primes all along the diagonal up until 1681.

    Dan.

    Comment


    • Happy to announce that Monique has solved the second cross-number now. Well done!
      I'll wait for at least one more answer though, before closing the round....

      Originally Posted by snookersfun

      Round 154: cross-number 2

      This is a standard cross-number puzzle in which all of the index numbers in the diagram have been erased, and the 22 clues have been randomized! Each clue refers to one of the 22 numbers in the diagram having more than one digit, and no two of them are equal. Furthermore, whenever a clue refers to another number or numbers, it means that those numbers are also among the 22 diagram numbers, different from the clue number and from one another. For example, "(8) Product of a triangle and a palindrome." means that the "Product" is the number of clue (8) and the "triangle" and "palindrome" are the numbers of two other clues, and all three of these numbers are different. However the numbers referred to in different clues may or may not be the same, only the clue numbers are sure to be different. Find the unique solution.

      Note: All numbers are positive integers, base 10, having more than one digit. No number may begin with a 0. The reversal of a number means the number formed by reversing the digits of the number, and for any number ending in 0 the reversal will not be defined or referred to in the puzzle. A number and its reversal are referred to as a reversal pair. A composite number is one which is not a prime.

      Also: NDD refers to the number of digits in the (completed) diagram. NDD is NOT one of the 22 clue numbers.


      (1) Cube root of the third largest number.
      (2) Cube whose reversal is a prime.
      (3) The only number having all square digits.
      (4) Larger member of a reversal pair of triangles.
      (5) Product of a palindrome and NDD.
      (6) Number whose digits are all equal.
      (7) Prime whose reversal is a cube.
      (8) Product of a triangle and a palindrome.
      (9) Product of four consecutive composite numbers.
      (10) Composite reversal of a 4-digit prime.
      (11) Smaller member of a reversal pair of triangles.
      (12) Square of a palindrome.
      (13) Ten less than a prime.
      (14) Ten more than a prime.
      (15) The only composite number whose digital sum is 22.
      (16) The only triangle whose digital sum is 24.
      (17) The smallest of four primes.
      (18) The smallest of five triangles.
      (19) The smallest of three palindromes.
      (20) The sum of all of the digits in diagram columns 2,3,4,5 (left to right).
      (21) Triangle which is also the sum of the squares of all of the digits in the diagram.
      (22) Composite number which is two less than the largest palindrome.

      Answers by PM please!

      Comment


      • Round 159 - On the phone

        I was just looking at the phone on my desk, trying to think of a question, and tapped in the number 8549176320.

        Why did I type this number?

        Answer please on this thread! First correct answer wins!



        (Wins what?)
        "If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can."
        David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.

        Comment


        • Originally Posted by davis_greatest
          I was just looking at the phone on my desk, trying to think of a question, and tapped in the number 8549176320.

          Why did I type this number?
          You typed the numbers according to their positions in the alphabet! Why, beats me though

          Originally Posted by davis_greatest
          Answer please on this thread! First correct answer wins!


          (Wins what?)
          yes indeed, more than parts of bananas, I hope

          Comment


          • Originally Posted by snookersfun
            You typed the numbers according to their positions in the alphabet! Why, beats me though

            Indeed I did - in alphabetical order: Eight, Five, Four....

            Congratulations snookersfun!

            Originally Posted by snookersfun
            yes indeed, more than parts of bananas, I hope
            What? Working towards winning a banana wasn't enough?
            "If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can."
            David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.

            Comment


            • Congratulations Snookerfun!
              I must confess that the only idea that crossed my mind when reading the terms of R159 was "Here is D_G punching the keys absentmindly (but still just once each!) while trying to remember what the number of the "puzzles with numbers and things" helpline could be

              Enjoy a banana split
              Proud winner of the 2008 Bahrain Championship Lucky Dip
              http://ronnieosullivan.tv/forum/index.php

              Comment


              • lol and thanks Monique. 'absentmindly' quite spot on, though one can never fault the logic of his puzzles (and trust me, I doubted a few questions initially...)
                I have to admit, on first glance I only noticed that 'once each' feature (drew geometrical patterns, figured words (but hey 1 and 0 are only blanks...)), had to step back and purge brain (oh, for two hours it seems) and suddenly it was there!

                Comment


                • Round 160 - Thorny problem

                  Continue:

                  74104143192152122102131121150140179699888180837275 64675659484140433235242716...

                  (Edit: when I view this on my screen, it appears to show a space between the 5 and 6 - there is no space in the number I entered, so ignore it if you see it too - I don't know why it is there.)
                  "If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can."
                  David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.

                  Comment


                  • add an 1 in the end...! ) possibly followed by 9080

                    Comment


                    • Originally Posted by snookersfun
                      add an 1 in the end...! ) possibly followed by 9080
                      Very close. As I think Monique is too (who sent me an almost-answer by PM). There are no more zeroes....
                      "If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can."
                      David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.

                      Comment


                      • OK, Monique and snookersfun have both got the answer. Let's hear it please....
                        "If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can."
                        David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.

                        Comment


                        • here is the number with proper spaces inserted:

                          741 041 431 921 521 221 021 311 211 501 401 79 69 98 88 18 08 37 27 56 46 75 65 94 84 14 04 33 23 52 42 71 61 9 8 1

                          now reading that from right to left (reversed numbers and all) (! and I have to admit I initially got the result, without doing that), it will be the sequence of a maximum break in snooker

                          Comment


                          • Wow, Talk about a brain teaser!
                            http://img411.imageshack.us/img411/398/stickmenzl3.gif

                            I wish someday, I will witness a 155 break.

                            Comment


                            • Originally Posted by Lee Vilenski
                              Wow, Talk about a brain teaser!
                              Fortunately Excel was quite useful here for producing the break and then reversing it for me - I don't think I'd have had the patience to type that out myself!
                              "If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can."
                              David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.

                              Comment


                              • lol, quite a nice one actually. You got an easy one for me?
                                http://img411.imageshack.us/img411/398/stickmenzl3.gif

                                I wish someday, I will witness a 155 break.

                                Comment

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