Skip to main content

Timeline for Melissa's Numbers

Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0

5 events
when toggle format what by license comment
Mar 15 at 20:37 comment added user88375 @AlexRavsky Frankly, I hadn't given any thought to the case where the 'start' of the numbers changes. In this case the next number will end in $d000\ldots00$ where $d$ is one greater than one of the original digits, which is either $1$ or even. So $d=2$ or $d$ is odd, and by the same observations $d\neq5$ and $d\neq7$. So $d\in\{1,2,3,9\}$. Not sure if we can say more.
Mar 15 at 19:03 comment added Alex Ravsky As I understood,, if the first number in the sequence of consecutive numbers ends in 96 and the rest of the number is the same for all numbers in the sequence then the sequence consists of at most four numbers.
Mar 15 at 18:28 history edited user88375 CC BY-SA 4.0
added 16 characters in body
S Mar 15 at 15:42 review First answers
Mar 15 at 15:43
S Mar 15 at 15:42 history answered user88375 CC BY-SA 4.0