The Light Switch Problem - Numberphile

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  • čas přidán 15. 02. 2023
  • Featuring Ben Sparks... See brilliant.org/numberphile for Brilliant and get 20% off their premium service and 30-day trial (episode sponsor)... More links & stuff in full description below ↓↓↓
    This is also widely known as The Locker Problem - we liked the light switches better!
    More Ben Sparks on Numberphile: bit.ly/Sparks_Playlist
    Ben Sparks on the Numberphile Podcast: • The Happy Twin (with B...
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    Highly Composite Numbers: • 5040 and other Anti-Pr...
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Komentáře • 787

  • @robadkerson
    @robadkerson Před rokem +1410

    I like that Ben treats you like any random novice. Helps us actual novices.

    • @geraldsnodd
      @geraldsnodd Před rokem +4

      True

    • @SirCalculator
      @SirCalculator Před rokem +34

      And he forgot 1 as a devisor at first. Very relatable

    • @AntiChangeling
      @AntiChangeling Před rokem +94

      Brady is like a veteran novice. He's the perfect person to do these.

    • @Pope_Balenciaga
      @Pope_Balenciaga Před rokem +23

      Einstein once said if you can't explain something clear enough to a novice, you don't understand it clearly yourself

    • @Silvar55x
      @Silvar55x Před rokem +4

      @@SirCalculator I think he was doing that intentionally to engage the viewer (and Brady).

  • @goodboi650
    @goodboi650 Před rokem +736

    Ben Sparks is always an absolute delight to watch, and his puzzles are always so satisfying too. Thank you for everything you do!

    • @cyrileo
      @cyrileo Před rokem +4

      👍 I totally agree, Ben Sparks' puzzles are fun and rewarding to solve!

    • @pear7777
      @pear7777 Před rokem

      Love these puzzles, subbed!

  • @ZachGatesHere
    @ZachGatesHere Před rokem +433

    Ben is the MVP when it comes to breaking concepts down to make them easy to understand.

    • @bencrossley647
      @bencrossley647 Před rokem +7

      Thanks ;)
      - I think he's also a school teacher / did a stint of school teaching so he will have had plenty of practice!

    • @cyrileo
      @cyrileo Před rokem +1

      ⭐️ I'm glad you think so! Let's solve the remaining puzzle together! 🤓

    • @xl000
      @xl000 Před rokem +1

      Mvp?

    • @SirNobleIZH
      @SirNobleIZH Před 11 měsíci +1

      Grant from 3b1b too

  • @Kaisharga
    @Kaisharga Před rokem +14

    This video gave me the realization that a square times a square is also a square. Which, now that I think about it and why that's true, seems obvious and clear, but I very much did not expect it until I saw it.

  • @bryantfuehrer2095
    @bryantfuehrer2095 Před rokem +147

    One of my favorite things about this video is that, through their conjecture, I discovered it before they said it and I felt like a genius even though I needed to lean on them leaving bread crumbs to lead me.

    • @piercexlr878
      @piercexlr878 Před rokem +21

      That's one of the best ways to be taught. Leaving you stranded, most people won't make much progress, but with just a little push, you get all the benefits of figuring it out without all the suffering looking for those bread crumbs. Math is all about taking things someone told you and trying to apply it to something they didn't tell you.

  • @QuantumHistorian
    @QuantumHistorian Před rokem +532

    The connection to primes is actually very very close. Take the same problem, but once a light is off you can never turn it back on. You now have an algorithm called _The Sieve of Eratosthenes_ which is a well known (and efficient!) way of generating the prime numbers. It's cute that a tiny change in the rules is the difference between spitting out primes and squares. Bonus fun fact: Eratosthenes was also the first guy to measure the radius of the Earth.

    • @oscarn-
      @oscarn- Před rokem +20

      That's the one! I had a nagging feeling that this reminds me of something else, thanks!

    • @ke9tv
      @ke9tv Před rokem +82

      Sift the twos and sift the threes
      In the Sieve of Eratosthenes,
      And as the multiples sublime,
      The numbers that remain are prime.

    • @columbus8myhw
      @columbus8myhw Před rokem +47

      Not quite - you also need the nth person to skip the number n itself.

    • @adarshmohapatra5058
      @adarshmohapatra5058 Před rokem +16

      ​@@ke9tvI love your rhyme!
      You are quite sublime
      You made my time
      I'd give you a dime

    • @EconAtheist
      @EconAtheist Před rokem +19

      "Don't believe everything you read on the internet."
      ~ Eratosthenes, Second Emperor of the Sixteen Kingdoms

  • @seedmole
    @seedmole Před rokem +144

    The slight segue about anyone beyond the 50th being able to only interact with a single switch would be a wonderful point to go off on a tangent about Nyquist theory in the context of Audio Sampling

    • @ke9tv
      @ke9tv Před rokem +5

      Yeah! Watrch the animation, and you'll see that there's an interesting complementary pattern starting from 100 as you run the light switches in reverse.

    • @cyrileo
      @cyrileo Před rokem

      Neat observation! 😎🤓

    • @TheStoneblogs
      @TheStoneblogs Před měsícem

      Can you please explain?

  • @cramesplays
    @cramesplays Před rokem +40

    Ben's excitement about this problem is contagious and his method of explaining it was excellent. Great video.

    • @cyrileo
      @cyrileo Před rokem

      Wow, awesome! 👍😃

  • @hyfy-tr2jy
    @hyfy-tr2jy Před rokem +195

    Its always nice to see Maximus the Mathematician! We are entertained!

    • @cyrileo
      @cyrileo Před rokem +1

      😊 I too appreciate Maximus and the video was captivating!

    • @WaltTFB
      @WaltTFB Před rokem +6

      'At my signal...unleash maths'.

  • @atharva1509
    @atharva1509 Před rokem +46

    This conversation with cameraman format is really great👍

    • @numberphile
      @numberphile  Před rokem +68

      Cool - maybe I could make something more of it! :)

    • @cyrileo
      @cyrileo Před rokem +6

      🤓 That's a great insight! It really speaks to the creativity of your thought process.

  • @stathyena
    @stathyena Před rokem +23

    Seeing Ben briefly question himself on some basic multiplication is oddly reassuring.

    • @piercexlr878
      @piercexlr878 Před rokem +5

      The difference between you and a mathematician isn't usually intelligence but time spent learning.

  • @DaTux91
    @DaTux91 Před rokem +5

    I'm stealing this puzzle and adapting it for my D&D game. Instead of lights getting switched, I'm thinking trapdoors over death pits. Stand on a non-square labeled one at your own peril, adventurer!

  • @BleachWizz
    @BleachWizz Před rokem +56

    amazing video. I love the fact Brady is clearly improving and participating more. Plus he brings a lot of questions that teachers usually gloss over because they're used to see that question so many times that it has become irrelevant.
    They're usually the ones that brings back connections from the model to the problem and those really help understanding.

    • @jursamaj
      @jursamaj Před rokem

      No, the questions teachers hear the most are where the most learning is, so they *don't* gloss over them.

  • @LeonardChurch33
    @LeonardChurch33 Před rokem +7

    I love when I realize that I can implement a solution to a particular math problem in code. I paused the video at 1:34 and wrote a little Java program to run through all 100 iterations before continuing with the video and was very satisfied when Ben got to the final answer and my result matched his.

    • @cyrileo
      @cyrileo Před rokem +1

      👊🏽 Nice work, MrCharlz! Props for taking immediate action and coding a solution! 😮

    • @Tommy_007
      @Tommy_007 Před rokem +1

      In general, experimenting by hand generates more ideas that can be used in a proof (which is the essential part of the problem).

  • @RavenZahadoom
    @RavenZahadoom Před rokem +21

    I knew it would be something to do with how many factors they have, because only the people with one of their factors would ever touch the switch, but didn't see the square thing coming. Interesting puzzle that one.

    • @alexandertownsend3291
      @alexandertownsend3291 Před rokem

      I think this is one of my favorite numberphile videos. I like how approachable it is. This is a problem you could reasonably give as extra credit on a math test for high schoolers.

  • @ysquaredyobozo
    @ysquaredyobozo Před rokem +3

    i love the ending "and that seems like a pleasing outcome to a potentially contrived problem", cuz, aint those the best puzzles

  • @localidiot4078
    @localidiot4078 Před rokem +2

    I vaguely remember this puzzle years ago. I never guessed the answer. I completely forgot about it until i watched this video. It took me 5 seconds to go through the primes -> Squares logic. Its crazy what a few years and some programming will do to your neurons.

  • @DeceptiveSS
    @DeceptiveSS Před rokem +2

    "Drawing" this one out in a spreadsheet was very satisfying. Just for the sake of seeing what it would look like in the end, all 100 manipulations side by side.

  • @joshuastucky
    @joshuastucky Před rokem +15

    Absolutely stellar video. Interesting, surprising, yet accessible math, coupled with a phenomenal presentation by Ben Sparks. Honestly, this is peak Numberphile content.

  • @alexbennie
    @alexbennie Před rokem +3

    The best feeling ever, after seeing the obvious 'Answer', without seeing the not-so-obvious-at-first 'Why'; then seeing it after many hours!
    I had this problem in an assessment years ago and ended up spending hours on excel simulating the problem...
    I saw that the pattern was *spoiler*. I then spent a ridiculous amount of time to try and figure out why only the *spoiler* stayed lit...
    One of the most fun/cool and fundamental ideas crop up in solving this problem.

  • @Sevenigma777
    @Sevenigma777 Před rokem +1

    This is the only channel on CZcams where in every single video i have watched there is a moment where i have no clue whats going on or being said but yet i keep on watching lol

  • @zacprunty
    @zacprunty Před rokem +9

    7:19 is exactly what makes this guy a mathematician. Loved this one.

  • @jucom756
    @jucom756 Před rokem +5

    i think this was an olympiad problem once because i instantly remembered how to do the solution: the amount of times a lightswitch is flicked is the amount of numbers of which the lightswitch is a multiple AKA the amount of divisors of the lightswitch, then because every divisor has an inverse divisor (d*m=K so d and m are both divisors) the total amount of divisors will always be even if those 2 are different for every divisor, so only the numbers that have a divisor equal to itself will be flicked an odd amount of times, divisor equal to itself means a square number so it will be all the squares that are on!

  • @nekogod
    @nekogod Před rokem +55

    James Grime did this with Othello pieces! Also sometimes demonstrated with school lockers. All about perfect squares because they have an odd number of factors!

    • @watcherfox9698
      @watcherfox9698 Před rokem +9

      I knew I seen this before. I thought it was an old Numberphile video, but it turns out it was on his own 'singing banana' channel.

    • @phiefer3
      @phiefer3 Před rokem +6

      James also did a video on Numberphile about highly composite numbers, which was brought up at the end. The episode '5040 and other anti-primes'

    • @davidgillies620
      @davidgillies620 Před rokem +4

      I've seen it with a corridor with 100 doors and 100 (suspiciously well-trained) monkeys.

    • @davidlohmann5098
      @davidlohmann5098 Před rokem +2

      It appears to be a common math or programming question. Other channels like ted-ed have videos on the problem calling it "the locker riddle".

  • @MTulak
    @MTulak Před rokem +5

    I figured out the squares would be the only lights on fairly quickly, but then I spent a while convincing myself they were the only integers with an odd number of factors. I'm glad they proved it!

    • @iCarus_A
      @iCarus_A Před rokem

      Yup, I arrived at the conclusion that odd-number factor numbers will be the ones left on, then drew the connection to squares -- as factors must always come in pairs but in the case (and only in the case) of a square, they can pair with themselves

  • @professorpoke
    @professorpoke Před měsícem +1

    I once read this question in a math magazine when I was in the 7th grade. I tried to solve it but couldn't. Then I almost forgot about this question. After more than a year (now I am in the 9th grade) it suddenly hit me, and I solved it. That made me realize that I never had forgotten about this question. It was there all the time, in my brain waiting for me to learn the right tools, waiting for me to become worthy to solve it.

  • @bigpopakap
    @bigpopakap Před rokem +22

    Wow, this little puzzle ended up touching on some really profound topics! So cool!!

    • @numberphile
      @numberphile  Před rokem +8

      So glad you liked it

    • @Einyen
      @Einyen Před rokem +5

      @@numberphile Hey you forgot to call the highly-composite numbers for "Anti-Prime numbers" like you did to annoy Dr. James Grime "5040 and other Anti-Prime Numbers" 😁😂

  • @ruferd
    @ruferd Před rokem +8

    One of my favorite puzzles to give students. A surprising answer, but when you stop and actually experiment and play around with it, it's almost obvious. Such a wonderful "ah-ha" moment for everyone when they experience it!

    • @alexandertownsend3291
      @alexandertownsend3291 Před rokem +1

      I actually tried it before watching the video. I solved it on my own after having my aha moment. I then watched the video and was happy to see I got it right. A lot of math puzzles that youtubers throw out are quite above my level, but I loved this one. It was a little bit tough, but not too tough.

    • @R3plicant
      @R3plicant Před rokem +1

      A "lightbulb" moment, if you will

    • @cyrileo
      @cyrileo Před rokem

      👍 Experimenting and problem-solving often leads to those special "ah-ha" moments. It's one of the magical sparks of mathematics that I love!

  • @codediporpal
    @codediporpal Před rokem

    I love that you guys are still doing these videos. It's been so long! This is one of the first youtube channels I subscribed to!

  • @Ms19754
    @Ms19754 Před rokem +2

    Such a great video! The conversational presentation, the clear explanations, the interesting but not too complicated problem. Just top of the top!

  • @nekkowe
    @nekkowe Před rokem +26

    The initial description reminded me of the prime sieve, which then got me thinking about how many times each switch would get flipped total = how many factors it has, which led pretty directly to "all non-square-number lights will be off at the end" - since that's the only case in which a switch would get flicked an odd number of times, with all other pairs of factors cancelling out.

    • @tspander
      @tspander Před rokem

      It was a similar thing for me, but even more basic- I remembered that if you do naïve exhaustive prime checking, you only have to go up to the root of the number because of the factor pairs they show later on in the video. That led me to the same even/odd factors idea and that square numbers would be the only ones where there is a number without a counterpart.

  • @BZAD1989
    @BZAD1989 Před rokem +1

    "Told ya!"
    That was so wholesome :))

  • @deyfuck
    @deyfuck Před rokem +2

    Been watching this channel since the start and this is the best video.

  • @darkdudironaji
    @darkdudironaji Před rokem +12

    I'm putting my guess to the problem down before watching the video.
    My first thought was that it would be easy to work out 1 at a time. Because you don't have to keep track of any numbers you've already passed. That was much harder to keep track of than I thought.
    But then I realized a switch only gets flipped when one of its factors comes up. So you just have to figure out if it has an odd number of factors, which would keep the light on, or an even number of factors, which would flip it off.
    After working on that for a few numbers, I realized factors ALWAYS come in pairs unless the number is a perfect square.
    In conclusion: 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, 64, 81, and 100 should be on. Everything else should be off.

  • @felixmerz6229
    @felixmerz6229 Před rokem +1

    Oh, I liked that detail of the light switch sound at the end.

  • @racecarrik
    @racecarrik Před rokem +7

    I love how Ben knows Brady's favorite square number lol they've got a great working relationship

  • @rudodejong
    @rudodejong Před rokem +16

    Very enjoyable video! The part at the end about 60, 180 and 360 blew my mind a little bit. 😉

    • @kindlin
      @kindlin Před rokem +2

      The Babylonian counting systems used 60 as the base, so they had 60 unique digits in their numbering system. This was useful for fractioning things. With 10 we can only do 1x10 and 2x5 and that's it. We just happen to have 10 fingers, is my guess.

    • @lyrimetacurl0
      @lyrimetacurl0 Před rokem

      😯

    • @liamriddy358
      @liamriddy358 Před rokem

      @@kindlin The Mesopotamians / Babylonians used the three sections of each of their four fingers to count to 12 just as easily 🙂

    • @thomasdupont1346
      @thomasdupont1346 Před rokem

      @@kindlin The Babylonians were my first thought as well when the 60, 180 and 360 were mentioned. They are the ones who first used 60 seconds in a minute and 360 degrees in a circle.

  • @Ghou1Lord
    @Ghou1Lord Před rokem +6

    "Told ya!" :) Again a very nice video about math. I can imagine a world where teachers like you make many many students love math instead of being afraid of it.

    • @cyrileo
      @cyrileo Před rokem

      👏🏻 Amazing insight! Math can be so much fun with the right person teaching it. 😆

  • @OwlRTA
    @OwlRTA Před rokem +7

    I remember doing this type of problem as something fun the teacher gave us in one of my high school math courses. I was so proud when I figured out that the square numbers would be different from the rest. I don't think I proved it rigorously though

    • @alexandertownsend3291
      @alexandertownsend3291 Před rokem

      There a few different ways to prove it. He showed one of them. Maybe you can find one of the others.

    • @cyrileo
      @cyrileo Před rokem

      👍 That's awesome, OwlRTA! Impressive deduction skills!

  • @radonato
    @radonato Před rokem +3

    Short of Mr. Grimes, Mr. Sparks is by far the superlative expositor of these great topics.

  • @PJSproductions97
    @PJSproductions97 Před rokem +1

    This is the first time in a long time I figured out the answer to a problem during the "pause and solve it" section.

  • @artswri
    @artswri Před rokem +2

    Another fun puzzle, so simple to perform but with interesting non obvious analysis. Thanks ever!

  • @macronencer
    @macronencer Před rokem +1

    Wonderful! I've seen the puzzle before but I'd never seen the proof, and it was pleasingly easy and elegant.

  • @jameslapslie1995
    @jameslapslie1995 Před rokem +1

    Had this question come up for a computer science interview at a London university literally yesterday. Hadn’t seen the video yet so ended up having to work it out in a similar way. A good reminder to watch your videos as soon as they come out rather then a week later 😂

  • @marklonergan3898
    @marklonergan3898 Před rokem +4

    To answer the question, i have heard this before long ago, but in trying to remember it, i did jump to Prime numbers, but then i figured primes still have an even number of factors so i had to figure the answer again from scratch. 😀

  • @palpytine
    @palpytine Před rokem +1

    My first thought was "This sounds a bit like the sieve of Eratosthenes", which is why I suspect many people first consider primes

  • @guyedwards22
    @guyedwards22 Před rokem +3

    I started this video before having to go to work and didn't get past the initial explanation of the problem. Just worked it out biking home afterwards, and I arrived at the conclusion about the square numbers via the parity of the product of the powers of the prime factors. Nearly crashed into the curb when I had the 'aha' moment 😵

  • @eugenefullstack7613
    @eugenefullstack7613 Před měsícem

    05:45 broke my brain! THAT WAS AWESOME!!!

  • @TheStatisticalPizza
    @TheStatisticalPizza Před rokem

    I actually figured this one out at the beginning without needing help! Kind of spooky because once he walked through it I realized I had the same train of thought by starting with the primes.
    I didn't make the connection beforehand that only perfect squares would have an odd number of factors so I learned something new.

  • @5eurosenelsuelo
    @5eurosenelsuelo Před rokem +1

    Videos with Ben are by far the best of this channel

  • @Kanareika2001
    @Kanareika2001 Před rokem

    Great show!
    Thanks for your labour, that's really exciting.

  • @laurendoe168
    @laurendoe168 Před rokem +7

    What I was wondering was 36 - this is 2 squared time 3 squared, and not writing it out I wondered if having a PAIR of duplications would cause it to have PAIRS of factors once again. Obviously not, but I found this interesting.

    • @cryptoooooooo
      @cryptoooooooo Před rokem +1

      I agree, but for the sake of writing it out:
      1x36 = 1 x (2 x 2 x 3 x 3)
      2x18 = 2 x (2 x 3 x 3)
      3x12 = 3 x (2 x 2 x 3)
      4x9 = (2 x 2) x (3 x 3)
      6x6 = (2 x 3) x (2 x 3)
      5 pairs of factors for 36, while one pair is a duplicate = 9 factors.

    • @laurendoe168
      @laurendoe168 Před rokem

      @@cryptoooooooo I realized long after I posted it that there was only one true duplicate... and didn't bother to delete the comment

    • @cyrileo
      @cyrileo Před rokem

      👍 Brilliant question! Even with 3 sets of duplicated factors, there are still an even number of factors!

  • @kevinn1158
    @kevinn1158 Před rokem +4

    This is a great experiment. I'm going to show this to my 14 yr old daughter.

  • @FandangoJepZ
    @FandangoJepZ Před rokem +2

    Had a similar problem in 8th grade where marbles were dropped in the nth bucket, and you had to reason about which buckets had such and such many marbles, was quite fun working out but also had 19 other problems to answer in those 90 minutes…

  • @alienmoonstalker
    @alienmoonstalker Před rokem

    Very nice problem and graphics. More please!

  • @GilCosta1965
    @GilCosta1965 Před rokem +1

    15:51 "we know the primes don't have many factors".
    gotcha.

  • @pacefactor
    @pacefactor Před rokem +1

    Man - this was so enlightening. I was messing with this stuff when designing card games, and my mind is just blown. I have so many more ideas.

  • @jaopredoramires
    @jaopredoramires Před rokem +4

    I like how Ben is like a master in GeoGebra

  • @marcusklaas4088
    @marcusklaas4088 Před rokem

    Interesting problem wonderfully explained. Thank you!

  • @lynk5902
    @lynk5902 Před rokem

    I got to the answer quickly, but not why. Thank you for the breakdown!

  • @justakiwi
    @justakiwi Před rokem +3

    I love how they keep on using the large piece of paper

  • @xdjrockstar
    @xdjrockstar Před rokem +1

    What a lovely puzzle and video

  • @yaduk7710
    @yaduk7710 Před rokem

    This video aligned with my thought process perfectly. That's awsome

  • @coreyburton8
    @coreyburton8 Před rokem +3

    loved this episode! thanks. cool association with the squares. and with the number of factors.
    60, 72, 84, 90, 96 have 12 factors they are the highest up to 100

  • @GlassDeviant
    @GlassDeviant Před rokem

    Brilliant! I knew the answer by 5 minutes in, and I've never considered this problem before. Excellent presentation.

  • @kamikaze2613
    @kamikaze2613 Před rokem +2

    Thank you for making math for novices fun and forever entertaining and engaging.

  • @RUBINHO12321
    @RUBINHO12321 Před rokem +1

    Great video!
    I would love to see a video teaching how to build this problem in geogebra

  • @golamkashef5255
    @golamkashef5255 Před rokem +1

    Ben Sparks has my favorite problems!

  • @ostimeg
    @ostimeg Před rokem

    That 'click!' at the very end was perfect

  • @Chelm9
    @Chelm9 Před rokem +1

    729 is an interesting one that would be switched on because it has 7 factors, because it’s 3^6, which has two “duplicate factors”, 3^2 and 3^4

  • @unvergebeneid
    @unvergebeneid Před rokem +2

    I figured it out up to the point that it depends on whether the number of factors is odd or even but I didn't figure out that the squares are the only numbers with an odd number of factors. I also don't think I ever would've figured that out, maybe with a lot of help by the interviewer... 🤔

  • @Kae6502
    @Kae6502 Před rokem +1

    I don't know why, but I absolutely laughed out loud at 14:48! Brilliant! :D

  • @AliGhorbani_a
    @AliGhorbani_a Před rokem

    This is such a refreshing video. Thank you

  • @GuusJanssen
    @GuusJanssen Před rokem +2

    *First time in forever I found out the answer before the video was finished!* Yeah! Right after Ben told what the problem was I opened the console and typed this:
    let lights = new Array();
    for ( let x = 1; x

    • @GuusJanssen
      @GuusJanssen Před rokem

      To see the switched on lights, just run:
      for ( let x = 1; x

  • @kushagrapiano9036
    @kushagrapiano9036 Před rokem

    Great explanation

  • @twoblink
    @twoblink Před rokem

    I didn't need to know this; but I watched the entire video and was better for it! Thank you! Quite interesting!

  • @JohannaMueller57
    @JohannaMueller57 Před dnem

    that was so much fun! man i love ben sparks videos

  • @Unknown-tx5iq
    @Unknown-tx5iq Před rokem +1

    Your channel makes me love maths even more. ❣️

  • @wiscadams
    @wiscadams Před rokem

    This problem was presented to me in an interview decades ago, except it was a hallway of lockers that you would open and shut, instead of lights. The next level is to figure out what happens if you alternate directions you toggle each number.

  • @gunnarliljas8459
    @gunnarliljas8459 Před rokem

    What a nice guy. Nicely presented and interviewed.

  • @jamesregovich5244
    @jamesregovich5244 Před rokem

    This problem introduced me to the idea of first differences, in which I “discovered that the first difference of the perfect squares is the series of odd numbers, which makes finding the state of the nth switch easily figured out.

  • @U2kheim
    @U2kheim Před rokem

    Great puzzle! I will sure be trying it out on my students sometime in the future!

  • @bsharpmajorscale
    @bsharpmajorscale Před rokem

    I'm proud that I thought about prime numbers a second before he brought them up. This definitely reminds me of stuff from the discrete mathematics class I took last year. Is there a connection to the method for working the sum-of-divisors function backwards? They both use (a+1)(b+1) form numbers.

  • @suan22
    @suan22 Před rokem +1

    Thank YOU for making such cool stuff on the internet!

  • @NoriMori1992
    @NoriMori1992 Před 10 měsíci

    I love how over the years you can see Brady's math knowledge and understanding growing and his astuteness improving. I thought he'd be tripped up by 16 seeming to only have one duplication, but he pointed out right away that 4 x 4 can also be expressed as 2 x 2 x 2 x 2.

  • @chadjones1266
    @chadjones1266 Před rokem

    Excellent choice

  • @alexzapf8212
    @alexzapf8212 Před rokem

    Awesome! Very fun and informative.

  • @llegaremosalasestrellas3245

    Very interesting!! I love your videos Ben!!

  • @hughbarton5743
    @hughbarton5743 Před rokem +1

    Hooray for Ben!!!

  • @danielngmoen3901
    @danielngmoen3901 Před rokem +1

    Woah what a cool solution! I thought along side the video, and was thinking of another possible solution:
    If you take all the numbers exponents and remove one, then sum them so
    n = (c1-1) + (c2-1) + . . . + (ck-1),
    the light switch will stay on only if this number is odd, and will stay off if the number is even. Any flaw to my logic?

  • @Baritocity
    @Baritocity Před rokem

    I was just thinking about this problem because of a sudoku puzzle I couldn't solve on my own that used this idea. Thanks.

  • @katari8604
    @katari8604 Před rokem

    Amazing old style Numberphile video. I think one specific part deserved more attention. The part at 15:00 where we deem that all square numbers +1 are odd. If we were to use 2^4 * 3^4 we'd get a nice number that satisifes the logic -> that is 1296 but as you might have guessed it's the square another number - 36 as you can evenly split the above multiplication into 2 simetrical groups (2^2 * 3^2) * (2^2 * 3^2) ... or just 36^2 :)

  • @The_JS_Camper
    @The_JS_Camper Před rokem

    I liked the start of an additional pattern showing on the final shot. If you tally the columns with squares you get 2,0,0,2,1,2,0,0,2,1
    Which you need to go up to 400 in order to see it double. Then I saw different pattern on the rows of 2,2,2,2,1,1,2,2,2,2,1,1. I saw this by starting from the number 1, and going across, you pass 2 squares going right before heading back to the left on the placement of the number line. This one is harder to put into words, but you can see it starting to emerge in the first 100.
    Dig the channel. 👍

  • @MrMas9
    @MrMas9 Před rokem

    Great video as always !

  • @user-fp7jz4ot6f
    @user-fp7jz4ot6f Před rokem +2

    heard about this problem a few weeks ago and solved it in a few minutes but very nice

    • @alanredversangel
      @alanredversangel Před rokem

      Me too. Then the Illuminati came and tried to recruit me but I said no thanks I'm quite happy just doing my DJing. They gave me a speedboat though because they respected my answer. I gave it to charity.

  • @matthewsaulsbury3011
    @matthewsaulsbury3011 Před rokem

    Wow! I didn't know this pattern existed! It's really neat!

  • @kelqka
    @kelqka Před rokem +1

    In Uni I had a similar question I had to verbally answer on the spot, to cement my grade in a class:
    "If you have 1000 lights. What is the least amount of switches you would need, to turn on Any Number of them"
    Tip: It was for a basic programing class

  • @sledgehammer-productions

    I assigned the on-lights to midi notes sounding and at the end (100, 10^2) I have 2xA, 4xC#, 4xE (that makes A major) and 1xC (A minor). And even when I extend the sequence to 76^2 I only get those 4 notes. This surprised me. So far I haven't been able to assess why this is. I like that it's neither major or minor, just somewhat in the middle.

  • @pauljones2510
    @pauljones2510 Před rokem +1

    In general, I like math videos. This one was especially nice. Very simple but rather intriguing.

  • @holofish
    @holofish Před rokem

    Great teacher.