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Subrat SaurabhAuthor of Kuch Woh PalP.C. Bakshi hails from a middle-class family. Being the second-born in a family greatly interested in numbers, he developed a lifelong love with Mathematics. After completing his post-graduation in engineering, he started his career with Coal India. Even at this time, he used to spend all his spare time, if he got any, to solve mathematical and logical puzzles published in a reputed newspaper’s brain-storming column. He always had a desire to excel in numbers, and take the subject the numbers to a different dimension. After retirement, he decided to actively pursue his passion and this book Read More...
P.C. Bakshi hails from a middle-class family. Being the second-born in a family greatly interested in numbers, he developed a lifelong love with Mathematics. After completing his post-graduation in engineering, he started his career with Coal India. Even at this time, he used to spend all his spare time, if he got any, to solve mathematical and logical puzzles published in a reputed newspaper’s brain-storming column. He always had a desire to excel in numbers, and take the subject the numbers to a different dimension. After retirement, he decided to actively pursue his passion and this book is the result of two years of hard work and dedication to his first love, the discovery of “untold numbers” for this world.
Read Less...Achievements
This book will introduce the world to a new topic of mathematics and open a new window for Prime Numbers. The method to write large numbers with repeated digits in a short space was first introduced in the book "An Untold Algorithm". This book is about "Summed Split Square Numbers" or SSS numbers in short. Though some of these numbers are very large they contain digits or groups of digits repeated several times. Large space is required to write these numbers.
This book will introduce the world to a new topic of mathematics and open a new window for Prime Numbers. The method to write large numbers with repeated digits in a short space was first introduced in the book "An Untold Algorithm". This book is about "Summed Split Square Numbers" or SSS numbers in short. Though some of these numbers are very large they contain digits or groups of digits repeated several times. Large space is required to write these numbers. But this method enables us to write such numbers in a short space.
This book has discussed the other aspect of this method. The most interesting aspect of this method is to distinguish between prime and composite numbers. If a number contains 1, 3, 7, or 9 at its unit place, then it is difficult to identify whether the number is a prime number or a composite number. Let us take a simple example. Suppose, we have two numbers 21 and 31, and both the numbers have 1 at their unit place. But 21 is a composite number and 31 is a prime number. Similarly, let us take the numbers 23 and 33. Both the numbers have 3 at their unit place. But here 23 is a prime number and 33 is a composite number. So it is difficult to identify a prime number. But we can easily identify them from the divisibility pattern of a number formed by repeating the digit 1 and dividing it by that number which is to be checked. This is discussed in detail in this book. This may open a new horizon to study the mysterious character of prime numbers.
It’s time to uncover an undiscovered aspect of Algebra.
This book will introduce the world to an entirely new concept and theorem on a special type of numbers. We have all studied in our Mathematics classes about odd numbers, even numbers, prime numbers, composite numbers, perfect numbers and such, but never thought the following type of numbers would exist. Named Summed Split Square Numbers or SSS Numbers, this concept talks about wh
It’s time to uncover an undiscovered aspect of Algebra.
This book will introduce the world to an entirely new concept and theorem on a special type of numbers. We have all studied in our Mathematics classes about odd numbers, even numbers, prime numbers, composite numbers, perfect numbers and such, but never thought the following type of numbers would exist. Named Summed Split Square Numbers or SSS Numbers, this concept talks about when any number, once squared and then split into two equal halves, and after adding, will give you that original number.
Sounds difficult? For example, take the number 45. The square of 45 is 2025. After splitting it, we get 20 and 25, adding which we get the original number, 45.
Do we know how many such numbers exist in the universe? The answer is, infinite. Another interesting fact about SSS Numbers is that these exist in pairs, which makes them different from other type of numbers.
Again, for example, the number 45 has a pair, 55, which is also a SSS Number. The sum of these pairs is usually a multiple of ten. (45+55=100, which is a multiple of ten.) You will be surprised to know that last half of both the squares are the same; and in this case, it is 25.
Do we know why? The mystery will be resolved in this book where such fascinating facts and numbers are being dealt with, including the author’s derivation of the formulae as well as some work on a method introduced in this book to describe the numbers with repeated digits, which may open new horizons.
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