Well, the dude is 65 now. Three years later he’ll be 68. He then gets into the machine and comes out as 89. He waits for two more years when he becomes 91. Enters the machine again, and BAM!
E4
Sheikh Sintha Mathar (sheikhsm7@gmail.com) wants to know if I’m so forgetful that one of the problems (“What is the next number in the series: 1, 1 1, 2 1, 1 2 1 1, 1 1 1 2 2 1, ?”) which appeared in March 2015 in these hallowed halls of higher academe, had also dittoed itself in October 2014, and laments the repetition has happened in less than six months. So what can I say except take me out to the Court of Lost Appeals and sue me for a million bucks in bitcoins or, pending that, goose-step me to some forgotten backyard lot and 9mm me between the eyes.
But just for that though, I’ve also decided to deliberately rerun yet another problem which most of you had conveniently blindsided your eyes to less than that same half-a- year earlier. Here it is: “A perfect sphere, made entirely of chalk, rolls on a uniform flat surface at a constant speed. The chalk is transferred from the sphere to the surface at a uniform rate. If the sphere rolls in a straight line until there is nothing left of it to roll, approximately what shape will be seen on the flat surface?” (Please note that those who had not solved it in the last six months will be taken to the same court of appeals or goose-stepped to a similar lot. However if you still can’t solve it, I’ll still understand.)
DEAR MS
(The leftover problem was: “If an army column 40km long advances 40km while a dispatch rider gallops from the rear to the front, delivers a dispatch to the commanding officer and returns to the rear, how far has he to travel?”— MS)
Backward-March-Dept:
The dispatch rider has to travel a distance of square root of (2 x (40)^2) + 40 km = square root of (3200) + 40 = 56.5685 + 40 = 96.5685km.
Dr K Narayana Murty,k_n_murty@yahoo.com
(Regarding the time travel and time machine problem, which is too long to repeat here, a lot of people thought the number 5 was the same upside-down which led to their utterly rapid downfall. However, others correctly realised that only 0, 1, 6, 8 and 9 can be stood on their heads without knowing yoga. Examples follow. — MS)
Age-Cannot-Wither-Dept:
Well, the dude is 65 now. Three years later he’ll be 68. He then gets into the machine and comes out as 89. He waits for two more years when he becomes 91. Enters the machine again, and BAM! He’s turned into a 16-year-old. This reasoning does sound ridiculous, but it was just off the top of my head. Will email a better one if I think of it. (Don’t bother, it works fine as it is — MS)
Abhi Vakyl, vakyl.abhi@gmail.com
He should first use it when he turns 68, making him 89 years old. Then he should use it when he turns 91. After using the machine he will become 16, a teenager. Therefore, it would take him five years in total.
Aniruddh Kottarathil, appu15399@gmail.com
(The third problem ran something like this: “If a donut — okay, okay dough-nut as some have British-ly pointed out — shaped piece of metal is heated, does the hole in the middle expand, contract or stay the same?” — MS)
The-Whole-Problem-Dept:
The hole in the middle will expand. This principle is used by horse cart drivers. They make a metal rim of slightly smaller inner diameter (than the wooden cart wheel), then they heat the rim. The rim expands and is then put around the wooden wheel to make it durable.
Athira Anand, athiraanand1@gmail.com
ENDGAME(S)
1. A bowler takes three wickets in three different overs, but it’s still a hattrick — how? Though it sounds like a puzzle, it’s actually happened in Test cricket!
Submitted by A V Ramana Rao, raoavr@gmail.com
2. If you rapidly unroll cello tape in a &dark room, you can see a brief glow along the line where the tape is being spun from the roll. Why?
To get in touch with Mukul, mail him at mukul.mindsport@gmail.com