3,411 research outputs found

    Carryless Arithmetic Mod 10

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    We investigate what arithmetic would look like if carry digits into other digit position were ignored, so that 9 + 4 = 3, 5 + 5 = 0, 9 X 4 = 6, 5 X 4 = 0, and so on. For example, the primes are now 21, 23, 25, 27, 29, 41, 43, 45, 47, ... .Comment: 7 pages. To the memory of Martin Gardner (October 21, 1914 -- May 22, 2010). Revised version (with a number of small improvements), July 7 201

    On Asymmetric Coverings and Covering Numbers

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    An asymmetric covering D(n,R) is a collection of special subsets S of an n-set such that every subset T of the n-set is contained in at least one special S with |S| - |T| <= R. In this paper we compute the smallest size of any D(n,1) for n <= 8. We also investigate ``continuous'' and ``banded'' versions of the problem. The latter involves the classical covering numbers C(n,k,k-1), and we determine the following new values: C(10,5,4) = 51, C(11,7,6,) =84, C(12,8,7) = 126, C(13,9,8)= 185 and C(14,10,9) = 259. We also find the number of nonisomorphic minimal covering designs in several cases.Comment: 11 page

    Digital collections usage at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library: 2015 report

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    This report analyzes administrative data (number of collections, total items) and web analytics usage data (sessions, users, page views) of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library’s locally managed digital collections from July 30, 2014 to July 30, 2015.Ope

    Mechanical Translation

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    Contains reports on two research projects.National Science Foundatio

    The Yellowstone Permutation

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    Define a sequence of positive integers by the rule that a(n) = n for 1 <= n = 4, a(n) is the smallest number not already in the sequence which has a common factor with a(n-2) and is relatively prime to a(n-1). We show that this is a permutation of the positive integers. The remarkable graph of this sequence consists of runs of alternating even and odd numbers, interrupted by small downward spikes followed by large upward spikes, suggesting the eruption of geysers in Yellowstone National Park. On a larger scale the points appear to lie on infinitely many distinct curves. There are several unanswered questions concerning the locations of these spikes and the equations for these curves.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures. Mar 7 2015: mostly stylistic change
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