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Atlas From a Map (Posted on 2011-02-22) Difficulty: 2 of 5
Someone took a huge square map and cut it into identical rectangular pieces by cutting straight down even columns and across even rows, thus preserving the orientation (portrait or landscape mode) of each piece identically, and then bound the pieces together to make an atlas, with each piece becoming a page. Each piece was an integral number of inches both vertically and horizontally.

There were between 50 and 150 pieces altogether, and it turned out that on each page, over 50% of the area was within two inches of the edge of the paper. If either dimension (height or width) of the page had been just one inch larger it would have been no longer true that over 50% of the page was within two inches of the edge.

What was the size of each piece that became a page?

  Submitted by Charlie    
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Solution: (Hide)
The only sets of dimensions for which over half the area is within two inches of the edge, but if either dimension is increased by 1, that that is no longer true, are:

        multiple       pieces
          used
 H  W     H  W   single double triple
 9 39    13  3      39   156     351
10 23    23 10     230   920    2070
11 18    18 11     198   792    1782
12 15     5  4      20    80     180
13 14    14 13     182   728    1638
14 13    13 14     182   728    1638
15 12     4  5      20    80     180
18 11    11 18     198   792    1782
23 10    10 23     230   920    2070
39  9     3 13      39   156     351

By way of explanation: the multiple used columns represent how many rows and columns would have to be used of repetitions of the given page size to form a square map, so for example, in the first row, 13 rows of 9-inch-high maps in 3 columns 39 inches wide would make the smallest possible square map using that shape of piece, where the square map would be 117 inches square. That arrangement has 39 pieces, but if you wanted to double each dimension of the large map that's fit together, it would have 156 pieces. If you tripled each dimension it would require 351 pieces.

So these are the only numbers of pieces that would result in a square overall map that had been cut up. Of these, only one lies between 50 and 150, and that is 80, which results from pieces that are 12 inches by 15 inches, which is thus the answer. The 80 pieces results from having used twice the 5*4 repetition of the dimensions, so it used 10 of the 12-inch dimension and 8 of the 15-inch dimension, and the original square map was 120 inches by 120 inches, or 10 feet by 10 feet.

From Enigma No. 1623, "Over the edge", by Susan Denham, New Scientist, 27 November 2010, page 28.

Comments: ( You must be logged in to post comments.)
  Subject Author Date
Some ThoughtsPossible solutionbroll2011-02-22 14:56:05
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