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| Ahmad and Bonita are wearing hats. They know they bear consecutive positive integers, under the usual hat rules |
| Ahmad and Bonita are wearing hats. They know they bear consecutive positive integers, under the usual hat rules. |
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<br>1. Dror: A, what number's on your hat? A: I dunno. |
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<br>2. D: B, what number's on your hat? B: I dunno. |
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<br>3. D: A, ... A: I dunno |
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<br> .... |
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<br>256. D: B, what's on your hat? B: I know! It's ____. |
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Revision as of 15:25, 25 November 2016
Riddle Repository
A collection of the riddles posed at the beginning of each lecture
Date of Lecture | Riddle | Solutions, Discussion, etc... |
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Sept 12 | We want to compute .
Prof. A claims , so Prof. B claims , so Smart student says . Why is the derivative the sum of the Prof's solutions? |
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Sept 14 | Can all of be covered by a set of disjoint, non-degenerate, circles? What about ? ? | |
Sept 16 | Can you find uncountably many disjoint subsets of ? | |
Sept 19 | Can uncountably many Y shapes be fit into ? | |
Sept 21 | On any pair of potatoes, can you draw a pair of 3D congruent curves? Hint (Hover) | |
Sept 23 | Can you find uncountably many subsets of s.t. the intersection of any two of them is finite? | |
Sept 26 | In how many ways can you place 4 different points in the Euclidean plane, such that there are 2 different distances between all the points? | |
Sept 28 | Can you find uncountably many subsets of s.t. for any two of them A and B, (A B) or (B A)? | |
Sept 30 | In a random 13-element subset of 1,2,...,52, what is the average value of the smallest element? (Credit: Yujia Yin) | |
Oct 3 | A spherical loaf of bread is put in a bread cutting machine. Which slice gets the most crust? | |
Oct 5 | Can you write the function as ? (Credit: Yujia Yin) | |
Oct 7 | Prove: If you tile a rectangle (whose sides are not integers) with rectangles, at least one of those will have both sides non-integer. | |
Oct 10 | (Thanksgiving holiday - University closed) | |
Oct 12 | Players A and B alternate placing 1 x 2, 1 x 3, and 1 x 4 lego pieces (as they choose) on a 19 x 21 board, with no layering and no overlaps. If you cannot place a piece, you lose. Who would you rather be A or B? What if the overall size was 20 x 20? | |
Oct 14 | No riddle. Discusses past riddle from Sept 19. | |
Oct 17 | An ant walks at 1cm/sec along a super-rubber-band that stretches at 1m/sec. Will it ever reach the other end? Why not? How long will it take? (Credit: Kodiak Jackson) | |
Oct 19 | How far can you go with n Jenga blocks? | |
Oct 21 | Can you place 6 identical real-life Jenga blocks/chalks such that any two of the will touch each other? | |
Oct 24 | Can you pack 125 1 x 2 x 4 boxes inside a 10 x 10 x 10 cube? | |
Oct 26 | Can you pack 21 3 x 1 rectangles on an 8 x 8 board? Any constraints on where the missing piece would be? | |
Oct 28 | No riddle. | |
Oct 31 | A total of k kids share a loot of n indivisible candies. The first proposes a split. If not accepted by a strict majority, she leaves and the second proposes a split... etc. How will the loot be split? | |
Nov 2 | Abhishek is at the centre of a circle of radius 100m. On the circle is a Lion. = . Help save Abhishek, by giving him a strategy that can always get him out of the circle, given that the Lion is very intelligent. | |
Nov 4 | Dmitry is at the centre of a stadium of radius 100m without any exit. A Lion is also in the circle. = . Given that Dmitry and the Lion are very intelligent, how long can Dmitry survive? | Hint: Can you find a sequence of points,so that the lion cannot catch Dmitry when he goes from one point to the next point, along the line connecting the two points? Clearly, if the distances of these line segments sum up to infinity, then Dmitry can run forever. -Yujia |
Nov 7 | (Fall reading break - No classes) | |
Nov 9 | Can you find two irrational numbers x and y such that is a rational number? | |
Nov 14 | Can you find a continuous f: [0,1] -> [0,1] with f(0) = 0 and f(1) = 1 which is differentiable with Df = 0 except on a set of measure 0? | |
Nov 16 | Can you cover a diameter 100 disk with 99 (possibly overlapping) 100 x 1 bands? | |
Nov 18 | No riddle. | |
Nov 21 | n ants walking towards m ants on a wire. All of them have the same velocity. When any two ants meet, a bang is heard. How many bangs are heard all together? | There is a long way and there is a short way. Though the long way is long, the thought process is more general.
W.L.O.G, assume n is less than or equal to m. When the two "head" ants hit each other, they go back and cause the "tail" ants go away. So you hear a total of (n-1)+(m-1)+1 bangs in this first propagation.Now that the "tail" ants leave the group, we are left with n-1 ants on one side, m-1 ants on the other side, each going towards each other at the same velocity. Repeat the same reasoning as above, we will here (n-2)+(m-2)+1 bangs, and so on. This process will end after n times since n is smaller than or equal to m. Sum up the number of bangs by propagations, we conclude n*n+m*n-n *(n+1)+n which is m*n bangs will be heard. Alternatively, one can consider the momentum of each ant. W.L.O.G, assume each ant has unit 1. We keep track of them by the arrows that represent their momentum. It is clear a bang is heard when two arrows intersect each other. But the arrows just just cross through each other after the collision. So the question is essentially asking how many times do arrows intersect each other. Well, there are n on one side, going in one direction, and m arrows on the other side. So they intersect in total n*m times.... - Yujia P.S. the second solution was proposed by Wilson Wu after today's lecture. |
Nov 23 | n black/white-hat-wearing prisoners stand in a row; each one sees the hats ahead of them but not their own or the ones behind. At noon, each one must guess and shout the colour on their head, going from the back forward. If more than one is wrong, all are executed. Could they have devised a strategy in advance, to save themselves? | |
Nov 25 | Ahmad and Bonita are wearing hats. They know they bear consecutive positive integers, under the usual hat rules.
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