Thursday 19 March 2015

trominoes

   the straight trominoes can be packed in a 3 by n rectangle in various ways   


Tuesday 17 March 2015

Golomb Vase

CSR math art can be relaxing and enjoyable as meditative math a new way of math thinking that is completely non competitive and focuses on careful craft like thinking and comparisons
Golomb vase requires careful cuisennaire rod counting to discover the numbers used and how they relate to a sequence to do with Golomb Rulers

 

Saturday 14 March 2015

Yates ordering in an artsy fashion

Yates ordering of P(P{1,2}) and a comparison with standard lexicographic ordering


GCD boats puzzle

   there has been some turbulent weather and so it may be that one or more of these GCD boats has a mast damaged by wind, what is the idea behind these GCD boats, and do any of them need some repair work on the masts ?   


Wednesday 11 March 2015

tribotetra morph

tribotetra morph concept  { within and between transpositions }



Tuesday 10 March 2015

comparisons from sequences related to the " Orloj " clock







Consider these sequences 121212121, 123212321, 1234321234321, 12345432123454321,
Can you get all the counting numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, ... from contiguous segments of these sequences ?
One of the sequences from the OEIS about the <1234321> example is sequence A028355
It is a kind of problem where intuition seems valid but proving is more difficult
It seems <121> and <1234321> do have the surprising property that one can always find connected segments that generate each of the successive counting numbers in turn.
This is not true for <12321> and <123454321>



 

Monday 9 March 2015

the 210 puzzle

two hundred and ten, 210, may seem like a non eventful little number, but it is the 4th primorial and therefore quite important. the primorials are products of consecutive primes starting from 2,
so they start with 2 then 2*3 = 6 , then 2*3*5 = 30 and 2*3*5*7 = 210
what's more amazing about 210, is there are 4 = 2*2 prime factors and the
number of distinct factors is (1+1)*(1+1)*(1+1)*(1+1) = 16 = 4*4 and the
sum of all the distinct factors is 576 = 24*24
furthermore, all the 16 factors can be represented by rectangles and packed into a 24 by 24 square



the 120 puzzle

find rectangles for all the divisors ( or factors ) of 120 without repeats so the sum of the areas of these rectangles is 360, and they can be packed into 3 copies of a rectangle with area 120 unit squares

 
 

Sheen of Chess

  orange deluxe fairy chess of sheen   

Sunday 8 March 2015

Hamiltonian paths

   The 6 Hamiltonian paths on a 16 square, 4 by 4 square lattice grid   
   tilt the laptop screen at various angles for interesting colour & light effects  



 
 

Saturday 7 March 2015

the splendour and intrigue of colour ensembles


  Tatami mats in a 2 by n-1 room { from the Narayana's cow sequence }  

 
  Snazzy