What is the significance of the repeating pattern in a circle of numbers?

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The discussion centers on the phenomenon of cyclic numbers, specifically the number 142857, which arises from the fraction 1/7. Participants explore how multiplying 142857 by integers 2 through 6 results in a sequence of numbers that can be read in a circular pattern, maintaining the same digits. This characteristic is linked to the properties of prime numbers, where the reciprocal of a prime can produce a repeating block of digits. The significance lies in understanding the mathematical principles behind these patterns, which are not merely coincidental but rooted in number theory. The conversation highlights the intrigue of cyclic numbers and their mathematical implications.
soeren
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hi,

i've got a question (don't know, if this is the right forum for this.. but i think, it isn't really a brain-teaser)

My biology teacher told me this and said, that he doesn't know anything about the reason for them.
It isn't a homework or something like that, but I and my friends are very interested in solving the "problem".. or even being able to explain it to oneself.

I've got the Numbers written in this circle:

\begin{matrix}&amp; 7 &amp; 1 &amp; \\ 5 &amp; &amp; &amp; 4 \\ &amp; 8 &amp; 2 &amp; \end{matrix}<br />


When i read it to the right, I get for example the number 285714

When i multiplicate this with 2, i get ..
The amazing thing of them is, that 285714 is readable in that circle, too.

That works with the factor 3; 4; 5, 6; too.

142857 * 2 = 285714
142857 * 3 = 428571
142857 * 4 = 571428
142857 * 5 = 714285
...

I tried to explain this to myself, but i didn't really understand it.

Can one of you please tell me why this works with that numbers?
Is contingency or _must_ it be like that?

thnx for help!

greets

Soeren

ps: sorry for my bad english, but this is not my mother-language...
 
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soeren said:
hi,

142857 * 2 = 285714
142857 * 3 = 428571
142857 * 4 = 571428
142857 * 5 = 714285
QUOTE]

what you seem to be talking about are cyclic numbers. In the case above 1/7 repeats in blocks of six digits, which same digits are also found in 2/7, 3/7...6/7.

This will occur when the reciprocial of a prime has a repeating block of p-1 digits. The next cases are: 17, 19, 23.

There is an article on this: http://mathworld.wolfram.com/CyclicNumber.html
 
very thanks! That explains it very good. :-)

greets

soeren
 
Seemingly by some mathematical coincidence, a hexagon of sides 2,2,7,7, 11, and 11 can be inscribed in a circle of radius 7. The other day I saw a math problem on line, which they said came from a Polish Olympiad, where you compute the length x of the 3rd side which is the same as the radius, so that the sides of length 2,x, and 11 are inscribed on the arc of a semi-circle. The law of cosines applied twice gives the answer for x of exactly 7, but the arithmetic is so complex that the...

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