365 and Level 6

If the earth revolved around the sun just a little bit faster there would be 364 days in a year, and those 364 days could easily be divided into 52-seven day weeks, thirteen 28-day months, and four 91-day seasons. If you were born on a Saturday, your birthday would occur on a Saturday every single year, too. Would there be more superstitions about the number 13 or less?

But that isn’t the way things are. It takes the earth nearly 365 1/4 days to revolve around the sun. We have settled on 365 days in a year with a 366-day leap year almost every four years.

365 has only two prime factors: 5 and 73. Seventy-three is a much bigger prime number than people use regularly, but it is only one more than 72 which has lots of great factors including twelve, a number that can easily be divided in half or into four seasons.

Besides if we could make the earth revolve around the sun faster, why not choose 360 days instead? Then we could have twelve 30-day months, four 90-day seasons, and our choice of 60 six-day weeks or 45 eight-day weeks. Perhaps we could listen to the Beatles sing Eight Days a Week.

On the other hand, I suppose we would all grow a little older a little faster…oops! Just forget I brought up the subject, please! And do something to keep your brain young, like this puzzle:

365 Puzzle

Print the puzzles or type the factors on this excel file: 10 Factors 2015-01-19

  • 365 is a composite number.
  • Prime factorization: 365 = 5 x 73
  • The exponents in the prime factorization are 1 and 1. Adding one to each and multiplying we get (1 + 1)(1 + 1) = 2 x 2 = 4. Therefore 365 has exactly 4 factors.
  • Factors of 365: 1, 5, 73, 365
  • Factor pairs: 365 = 1 x 365 or 5 x 73
  • 365 has no square factors that allow its square root to be simplified. √365 ≈ 19.105

365 Logic

2 thoughts on “365 and Level 6

  1. It’s a real nuisance that the year is an awkward number of days long. But then it’s also rather nice that it’s almost a convenient 360 days long; that surely brought people’s attention to such a nice and well-behaved number. It’d be different if the year were, oh, 327 days long; I don’t think there’s anything nice in that neighborhood.

  2. It’s also very handy that a year is very nearly 365.25 days long (365.2425). That means we can correct nearly everything just by having a leap year every 4 years. Of course, the length of one year is slowly increasing as the Earth’s rotation slows.

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