Bạn có thể giải Câu đố Alice In Wonderland không? – Alex Gendler

Can you solve the Alice in Wonderland riddle? - Alex Gendler
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Can you solve the Alice in Wonderland riddle? - Alex Gendler

 
After many adventures in Wonderland, Alice has once again found herself in the court of the temperamental Queen of Hearts. She’s about to pass through the garden undetected, when she overhears the king and queen arguing. “It’s quite simple,” says the queen. “64 is the same as 65, and that’s that.” Without thinking, Alice interjects. “Nonsense,” she says. “If 64 were the same as 65, then it would be 65 and not 64 at all.” “What? How dare you!” the queen huffs. “I’ll prove it right now, and then it’s off with your head!” Before she can protest, Alice is dragged toward a field with two chessboard patterns— an 8 by 8 square and a 5 by 13 rectangle. As the queen claps her hands, four odd-looking soldiers approach and lie down next to each other, covering the first chessboard. Alice sees that two of them are trapezoids with non-diagonal sides measuring 5x5x3, while the other two are long triangles with non-diagonal sides measuring 8x3. “See, this is 64.” The queen claps her hands again. The card soldiers get up, rearrange themselves, and lie down atop the second chessboard. “And that is 65." Alice gasps. She’s certain the soldiers didn’t change size or shape moving from one board to the other. But it’s a mathematical certainty that the queen must be cheating somehow. Can Alice wrap her head around what’s wrong— before she loses it? Pause the video to figure it out yourself. Answer in 3. Answer in 2 Answer in 1 Just as things aren’t looking too good for Alice, she remembers her geometry, and looks again at the trapezoid and triangle soldier lying next to each other. They look like they cover exactly half of the rectangle, their edges forming one long line running from corner to corner. If that’s true, then the slopes of their diagonal sides should be the same. But when she calculates these slopes using the tried and true formula "rise over run," a most curious thing happens. The trapezoid soldier’s diagonal side goes up 2 and over 5, giving it a slope of two fifths, or 0.4. The triangle soldier’s diagonal, however, goes up 3 and over 8, making its slope three eights, or 0.375. They’re not the same at all! Before the queen’s guards can stop her, Alice drinks a bit of her shrinking potion to go in for a closer look. Sure enough, there’s a miniscule gap between the triangles and trapezoids, forming a parallelogram that stretches the entire length of the board and accounts for the missing square. There’s something even more curious about these numbers: they’re all part of the Fibonacci series, where each number is the sum of the two preceding ones. Fibonacci numbers have two properties that factor in here: first, squaring a Fibonacci number gives you a value that’s one more or one less than the product of the Fibonacci numbers on either side of it. In other words, 8 squared is one less than 5 times 13, while 5 squared is one more than 3 times 8. And second, the ratio between successive Fibonacci numbers is quite similar. So similar, in fact, that it eventually converges on the golden ratio. That’s what allows devious royals to construct slopes that look deceptively similar. In fact, the Queen of Hearts could cobble together an analogous conundrum out of any four consecutive Fibonacci numbers. The higher they go, the more it seems like the impossible is true. But in the words of Lewis Carroll— author of Alice in Wonderland and an accomplished mathematician who studied this very puzzle— one can’t believe impossible things.

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