Million Millimeter March for MoMath

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I went to visit the National Museum of Mathematics in new York City to walk the Million Millimeter March to celebrate the 1 millionth visitor to MoMath. Puzzle enthusiast and mathematician Peter Winkler (Dartmouth) joined me to provide some fun facts about numbers along the way.

The fun facts about numbers explained by Peter Winkler are copied below for reference:

142,857 - a cyclic number. Try multiplying it by 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 or 6 and see what happens!

219,978 - the only 6-digit number such that if you multiply it by 4 it reverses!

322,560 = 9! - 8!

422,481 - the smallest number whose fourth power is itself the sum of three smaller fourth powers: 422,481^4 = 414,560^4 + 217,519^4 + 95,800^4

548,834 - a six-digit number equal to the sum of the sixth powers of it's six digits: 548,834 = 5^6 + 4^6 + 8^6 + 8^6 + 3^6 + 4^6

604,800 - the number of seconds in a week.

742,900 - the number of different ways to walk from the bottom left to the top right (only moving along grid lines to the right or upward) in a 13x13 grid, always staying below the diagonal.

801,125 - the smallest number that is the sum of two positive squares in at least 2^2^2 ways.

873,613 = 1^1 + 2^2 + 3^3 + 4^4 + 5^5 + 6^6 + 7^7

1,000,000 = the number of visitors to MoMath!

With thanks to MoMath Executive Director Cindy Lawrence and Peter Winkler.

Produced by Dr Tom Crawford, a Mathematician at the University of Oxford.

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Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
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That was pleasant and relaxing to watch.

qwertyTRiG
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142857 Fact... Which is also why converting sevenths to decimals is a great homework investigation.

ImDoubleDelight
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Oh my goodness. I can't even, with a trundle wheel... It's more accurate to guess the distance 🤪

ImDoubleDelight