English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

If you multiply your age by seven and then multiply the product of those numbers by 1,443, it will come out for example, 454545 if you are 45 years old. if you are 70 years old your answer will be 707070. Does anybody know why this happens? If So i HAVE to know!

2006-08-14 11:14:15 · 7 answers · asked by ***** 2 in Education & Reference Homework Help

7 answers

It works because the two numbers you are multiplying except for your age give you 10101. That number times any 2 digit number gives you that two digit number repeating.

2006-08-14 11:20:33 · answer #1 · answered by MollyMAM 6 · 1 0

It's because 7 X 1443 = 10101

No matter what your age, and therefore no matter what number you multiply by 10101 you'll get those repeating digits.

Try multiplying your age by 3, and then the product of those two numbers by 3367. It's not magic.

2006-08-14 12:02:25 · answer #2 · answered by jayson 2 · 0 0

10101 is an identity,
just like in matrix:

100
010
001

which would give you back the same number if you multiply it together. but in this case, the number is in linear form and if the age is a 2 digit # then the age will be reflected in the product(10101*age) in a consecutive order of 3,making it 6 digits eg 121212 or 212121 whilst the age is 12 and 21 respectively. in the case of single digit age range, the age will be reflected in the product of 10101 and the single digit age by the non-zero digits in the product eg age:6 product(10101*6)=60606----->the age is 6 and it is quite visible from this product order with an interval of zero.

2006-08-14 11:56:54 · answer #3 · answered by POLLY T 1 · 1 0

Multiply 1443*7 to get 10101. Maybe that could be a start to the answer, because your just multiplying by 10 at that point.

2006-08-14 11:20:55 · answer #4 · answered by Computer Genius 2 · 0 0

Its just logic...if thats not enough search for is on Google or something

2006-08-14 11:19:38 · answer #5 · answered by ... 2 · 0 0

Thanks for showing this. I had a teacher say it only works for the year 2006, but I don't understand that either.

2006-08-14 11:27:05 · answer #6 · answered by Caffeinated 4 · 0 0

wow thats a useless fact

2006-08-14 11:22:18 · answer #7 · answered by Jason L 1 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers