|
1089 and all
that
An extract from a new book
written by David Acheson.
1089 and All
That
Think of a three-figure
number.
Any three-figure number will do, so
long as the first and last figures differ by 2 or more. Now
reverse it, and substract the smaller number form the larger.
So, for example,
782 - 287 =
495.
Finally, reverse the new
three-figure number, and add:
495 + 594 =
1089.
At the end of this procedure,
then, we have a final answer of 1089, though we have to
expect, surely, that this final answer will depend on which
three-figure number we start with. But it doesn't.
The final answer always turns out to be 1089.
Why?
The first step, if you recall, is
to take a 3-digit number, reverse it, and subtract the smaller
from the larger.
Suppose, then, that the larger of
the two numbers has digits a, b, c; then its actual value is
100a + 10b + c, and after 'reversing' and subtracting we will
have 100a + 10b + c - (100c + 10b + a), which is the same
as:
100a +
10b + c - 100c -
10b - a = 99a -
99c = 99 (a -
c).
As a and c are whole numbers, this
shows, then, that at the end of the first part of the trick we
will always end up with a multiple of 99.
Now, the 3-digit multiples of 99
are 198, 297, 396, 495, 594, 693, 792, 891, and we note at
once how the first and third digits of each of these add up to
9. So, when we reverse any one of these numbers and add -
which is the last part of the 'trick' - we get 9 lots of 100
from the first digits, 9 lots of 1 from the third digits, and
2 lots of 90 from the second digits, giving
900 + 9 + 180 =
1089.
So we have done a little
mathematical conjuring, and a bit of algebra helped us along
the way.
You can buy this
book from Amazon.co.uk or Amazon.com. |
 |