Author : Mathematical Association America
Publisher : Rarebooksclub.com
ISBN 13 : 9781230059754
Total Pages : 92 pages
Book Rating : 4.0/5 (597 download)
Book Synopsis The American Mathematical Monthly; the Official Journal of the Mathematical Association of America Volume 4 by : Mathematical Association America
Download or read book The American Mathematical Monthly; the Official Journal of the Mathematical Association of America Volume 4 written by Mathematical Association America and published by Rarebooksclub.com. This book was released on 2013-09 with total page 92 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1897 edition. Excerpt: ...hypothesis either of right angle or of obtuse angle; and therefore (from V and VI of this) is destroyed the hypothesis of acute angle. So then it holds, that there will be no place for the hypothesis of acute angle, if the straight AX drawn under however small angle from the point A of AB must at length meet (anyhow at an infinite distance) any perpendicular BX, which is supposed erected at any distance from this point A upon this secant AB. Quod erat etc. SOME DIVISIBILITY TESTS. By WM. E. HEAL, Member of the London Mathematical Society, Marion, Indiana. In the Educational Times for March, 1897, Professor Sylvester proposed the following problem: "If the digits r in number of any integer AT read from left to right be multiplied repeatedly by the first r terms of the recurring series 1, 4, 3, --1, --4, -3; 1, 4, 3, -i, --4, -3, show that, if the sum of these products be divisible by 13, so N will be, and not otherwise." The reason for the rule is apparent when we notice that 1, 4, 3, --1, --4, --3 are the remainders in reverse order of 10', 102, 103, 10, 105, 10" mod. 13; or what is the same thing in the development of,1s as a circulating decimal. Since we may prefix any number of ciphers to any number, it is clear that we may start with any number of the series only being careful to preserve the cyclical order. For example, we might equally as well write the series 3, -1, -4, -3,1,4. Example. 11140640173 is divisible by 13 because 1(1) +4(1) +3(1)--1(4)-4(0)-3(6) + l(4) + 4(0) + 3(l)-l(7)-4(3)=-26=-2(13). 728 is divisible by (13) because 3(7)-l(2)-4(8)=-13. The reason for the rule suggests its extension to any number whatever. Thus i developed in a circulating decimal gives the constant remainder 1 and we have the well known rule that...