A tromino is a domino of three panels in a row, sized to cover three successive orthogonal squares of a checkerboard.
A monomino covers one square.
Is it possible to cover an 8×8 checkerboard with 21 trominoes and 1 monomino?
A tromino is a domino of three panels in a row, sized to cover three successive orthogonal squares of a checkerboard.
A monomino covers one square.
Is it possible to cover an 8×8 checkerboard with 21 trominoes and 1 monomino?
In his Canterbury Puzzles of 1907, Henry Dudeney posed a now-famous challenge: How can you cut an equilateral triangle into four pieces that can be reassembled to form a perfect square?
Dudeney’s beautiful solution was accompanied by a rather involved geometric derivation. It seems unlikely that he worked this out laboriously in approaching an answer to the problem, but how then did he reach it?
Here’s one possibility: If a strip of squares is draped adroitly over a strip of triangles, their intersection forms a wordless proof of the task’s feasibility:
Whether that was Dudeney’s path to the solution is not known, but it appears at least plausible.
A puzzle by Ying Zhou, Daniel Irving, and Walter Gall of Rhode Island College, from the February 2012 issue of Math Horizons:
A sports team is divided into “red” and “blue” groups of 10 players each. Each player puts his belongings into a bag of his team’s color and puts it into one of 20 lockers, choosing at random. All the players leave the room. Presently one of the red team returns and can’t remember which locker is his. He and the janitor make a bet: The player can keep opening lockers so long as each bag he discovers is red. If he finds his bag, the janitor will give him $7. If not, he’ll owe the janitor $1. Should the player take the bet?
This is charming somehow: a detailed portrait of a place that doesn’t exist. During the Cold War, U.S Army cryptologist Lambros D. Callimahos devised a “Republic of Zendia” to use in a wargame for codebreakers simulating the invasion of Cuba. (Callimahos’ maps of the Zendian province of Loreno are below; click to enlarge.)
The Zendia map now hangs on the wall of the library at the National Cryptologic Museum. The “Zendian problem,” in which cryptanalysts students were asked to interpret intercepted Zendian radio messages, formed part of an advanced course that Callimahos taught to NSA cryptanalysts in the 1950s. Graduates of the course were admitted to the “Dundee Society,” named for an empty marmalade jar in which Callimahos kept his pencils.
08/02/2025 UPDATE: Apparently they speak Esperanto in Zendia, or at least their cartographers do. “Respubliko” is Esperanto for “Republic,” “Bovinsulo” and “Kaprinsulo” are “Cow-Island” and “Goat-Island”, and so on. (Thanks, Ed and David.)
From an old copy of Games magazine:
Four players describe the cards they held in their last game of five-card poker:
Harry: “I had the two, nine, and jack of hearts, and the two and nine of diamonds.”
Edna: “I held four fives and the queen of spades.”
Dave: “I had a black straight flush.”
Frankie: “I held a club flush.”
Georgiana: “I had a straight. Two of my cards were spades; the others weren’t.”
Cleo: “I just had one lousy pair.” (to Frankie:) “But my lowest-ranking card was higher than any of yours.”
An onlooker asks how many of the undealt cards were black, and Dave answers, “No more than three.” What were the contents of Dave’s, Frankie’s, Georgiana’s, and Cleo’s hands?
A puzzle by National Security Agency mathematician David B., from the agency’s October 2017 Puzzle Periodical:
Joey, the baby kangaroo has been kidnapped and placed at 2100 on a number line.
His mother, Kandice the Kangaroo, is at 0 on the number line, and will try to save him. Kandice normally jumps forward 6 units at a time. Guards have been placed at n3 on the number line, for every integer n≥1. If Kandice lands on a number with a guard on it, she will be caught and her mission will fail. Otherwise, she will safely sneak past the guard. Whenever she successfully sneaks past a guard, she gets an adrenaline rush that causes her next jump (the first jump after passing the guard) to take her 1 unit farther than it normally would (7 units instead of 6). (After a single 7-unit jump, she resumes jumping 6 units at a time, until the next time she sneaks past a guard.)
Will Kandice the Kangaroo reach (or pass) her son Joey safely?
A problem by G. Galperin, from the May-June 1995 issue of Quantum:
A raft and a motorboat depart simultaneously from Point A on a riverbank and begin drifting and speeding downstream, respectively, toward Point B. At the same moment, a second motorboat, of the same type as the first, sets out from Point B heading upstream. When the first motorboat reaches B, will the floating raft be closer to Point A or to the second motorboat?
A problem by Russian mathematician Viktor Prasolov:
On a piece of graph paper, is it possible to paint 25 cells so that each of them has an odd number of painted neighbors? (“Neighboring” cells have a common side.)
In a 1905 short story by Jacob Elson, Mr. Brown laments that he cannot solve chess problems.
Mr. Pincus wagers $10 that “I can show you a two-move problem with three different lines of play which you would have to solve whether you wanted to or not.”
Brown accepts. After studying the board for 10 minutes, he says, “It’s a humbug, a confounded silly swindling humbug, but I am beat.” Here’s the position: