Can you explain why the fourth root of 9.1 is practically the same as 33/19? You shouldn't use even a calculator!
So I asked myself was there something special about 91/10 and 33/19 or
are there lots of examples that could be used to create this problem?
First, what do I require? I want two fractions a/b and c/d such that
(a*c^4)/(b*d^4) is almost 1. More specifically, we will require that
the numerator and denominator differ by exactly one:
|b*c^4-a*d^4|=1 . With thought you can see that if we have a pair of
fractions that meet this condition, then the pair of inverses also
work. So off the bat, we see 10/91 and 19/33 would have worked, but
using 9.1 was a nice bonus.
Furthermore, I want a,b,c and d to all be at most 2-digit numbers.
Guess what, e.g.'s pair has the fraction closest to 1 of all 106 pairs
(and their inverses) that meet these conditions! And there are only 8
(and inverses) that have reasonably small errors (my opinion :-) ).
My second favorite of these: fourth root of 39 is very close to 2.5. My
favorite: the fourth root of 76/15 is very closer to 3/2 but the fourth
root of 86/17 is even closer!
Yes, I used a calculator :-)
I edited with more care towards my statements about error.
Edited on June 7, 2005, 4:54 pm
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Posted by owl
on 2005-06-07 05:46:16 |