Late Progress

Back in 2017 I wrote about the Feynman ciphers, three coded messages that had been presented as challenges to Richard Feynman in the 1950s.

Feynman couldn’t crack them, and even at the time of my post only the first of the three had been decoded — it turned out to be a transposition of the opening of Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales in Middle English. But in May 2023 David Vierra solved the other two — one turns out to be an excerpt from A.E. Housman’s 1896 poem “Terence, This is Stupid Stuff,” and the other is the start of Feynman’s 1953 paper “Atomic Theory of the λ Transition in Helium,” from The Physical Review.

Who was the “fellow scientist” who had devised these challenges? Nick Pelling thinks the most likely candidate is Paul Olum, who had been Feynman’s officemate at Los Alamos in the 1940s, but hard evidence is lacking. More at Cipher Mysteries.

(Thanks to reader Peter Dawyndt for the tip.)

Black and White

henle retrograde puzzle

Smith College mathematician Jim Henle published this retrograde analysis puzzle in the Mathematical Intelligencer in 2018 as part of an appreciation of Raymond Smullyan. “After many moves, the chessboard appears as above. What were the last two moves?”

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The Polish Acquaintanceship Problem

A Polish problem longlisted for the 19th International Mathematical Olympiad in Yugoslavia, July 1977:

A room contains nine men. Among every three of them there are two who are mutually acquainted. Prove that four of them are mutually acquainted.

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The Liars

A problem by British puzzlist Hubert Phillips:

In writing home about an examination, five schoolgirls each made one true statement and one untrue one. The relevant passages:

Betty: Kitty was second in the examination. I was only third.
Ethel: You’ll be glad to hear that I was top. Joan was second.
Joan: I was third, and poor old Ethel was bottom.
Kitty: I came out second. Mary was only fourth.
Mary: I was fourth. Top place was taken by Betty.

In what order did they place?

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A Number Maze

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Maze_Type_Number.png
Image: Wikimedia Commons

By Wikimedia user Efbrazil. Begin at the star. The number at your current position tells you the number of blocks that your next jump must span. All jumps must be orthogonal. So, for example, your first jump must take you to the 1 in the lower left corner or the 2 in the upper right. What sequence of jumps will return you to the star?

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Shipshape

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cmglee_Cambridge_Trinity_College_punt_names.jpg
Image: Wikimedia Commons

These are the punts of Trinity College, Cambridge, moored on the River Cam. What is the significance of their names?

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Freight

A problem from Cambridge mathematician J.E. Littlewood’s Miscellany (1953):

Is it possible to pack a cube with a finite number of smaller cubes, no two of which are the same size?

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