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Date: 26-11-2020
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Date: 28-5-2020
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Date: 9-1-2021
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Consider the decimal expansion of the reciprocal of the number seven,
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(1) |
which is a repeating decimal. Now take overlapping pairs of these digits, giving (1, 4), (4, 2), (2, 8), (8, 5), (5, 7) and (7, 1).
Five points determine a conic equation. Surprisingly, all six of these points lie on the ellipse (Wells 1986)
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(2) |
illustrated above.
Even more surprisingly, overlapping pairs of pairs of digits, given by (14, 28), (42, 85), (28, 57), (85, 71), (57, 14), (71, 42), also give an ellipse. This ellipse has equation
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(3) |
and is illustrated above.
REFERENCES:
Wells, D. The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Numbers. Middlesex, England: Penguin Books, 1986.
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دراسة تكشف "مفاجأة" غير سارة تتعلق ببدائل السكر
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أدوات لا تتركها أبدًا في سيارتك خلال الصيف!
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العتبة العباسية المقدسة تؤكد الحاجة لفنّ الخطابة في مواجهة تأثيرات الخطابات الإعلامية المعاصرة
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