Yes, all the information needed is there

  • Thread starter tribdog
  • Start date
  • Tags
    Information
In summary, the conversation discusses the birthdate of the speaker's grandfather and how it can be determined based on the fact that he only had one candle on his 8th birthday. The conversation also delves into the topic of skipped leap years and how they impact the calendar. The conversation ends with a discussion on how people calculate their birthdays.
  • #1
tribdog
769
17
My grandpa was a smart kid, if he was shown something or told something once then he would never forget it. He told me a story about his birthday party when he was 8 years old. He said that when the cake was brought out, he just sat there and he never realized he should make a wish.

Brain teaser: When was my grandpa born? day, month and year.
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
Unless your grandpa had a candle shaped like the number "8" (which was probably not done all those years ago), the only likely reason that he had only one candle must be related to a skipped leap year.

A regular leap year would have him with 2 candles on his 8th birthday, so I must look thru calendars to find out when they skipped the last leap year (that happens about once a century or so ?), and Feb 29 of this skipped year was when grandpa turned 4.


Too lazy to do this now.
 
Last edited:
  • #3
Feb. 29th, 1896. ??
 
  • #4
you got it check. This is actually true too. If he would have lived both me and him would have had our 23rd birthday in the same month.
 
  • #5
Okay, how did you guys know the number of candles? I don't see it in the original question...was that edited out? :grumpy:

Though, I never knew leap years were skipped. That's pretty cool to learn.
 
  • #6
Moonbear said:
Okay, how did you guys know the number of candles? I don't see it in the original question...was that edited out? :grumpy:

Though, I never knew leap years were skipped. That's pretty cool to learn.

Yeah, trib changed that...don't know why. It originally read something like "he didn't make a wish before the candle burnt through.

This explains why the answer is what check guessed.
 
  • #7
I realized that the single candle wasn't necessary information. Leap years are skipped every century that cannot be divided evenly by 400. So 1900 no leap year, 2000 leap year. grampa was 8 on his first birthday.
 
  • #8
Um, you need the candle part in it otherwise his birthday could be on any day in any month in any year. there's nothing distinguishing about the teaser now.
 
  • #9
check said:
Um, you need the candle part in it otherwise his birthday could be on any day in any month in any year. there's nothing distinguishing about the teaser now.

That's what I thought. It now sounds like whenever he happened to be 8 years old. The candle is important (not that I'd have likely caught that clue anyway, but no chance without it there).
 
  • #10
no, he would have known to make a wish if he had had a birthday before.
 
  • #11
tribdog said:
no, he would have known to make a wish if he had had a birthday before.

That is somewhat ambiguous. It could also imply that there was no candle, in which case he couldn't make a wish.
 
  • #12
tribdog said:
no, he would have known to make a wish if he had had a birthday before.

If he didn't realize he should make a wish, there could have also been NO candles on the cake (that's what I was first thinking, and didn't know why there would be no candles on an 8th birthday), not just one, which causes a great deal more ambiguity, even if you know about skipped leap years (I wouldn't have gotten the right answer either way, but the question at least needs to be fair).
 
Last edited:
  • #13
If his birthday cake had no candles, it would seem pretty obvious what the poor kid would wish for. He's either wishing for a book of matches to light candles with or wishing for rain (drought season and its accompanying fire bans are especially hard on children).

Since he didn't wish for either, there was only one possible explanation - he had never had a birthday before.

I like calendar questions. For instance, we all know what happened in New York City on Sep 11, 2001, and quite a few know that roughly 2,602 people died that day. But, how many people died in New York City on Sep 11, 1752, and what happened to cause that particular number of deaths for that date?
 
Last edited:
  • #14
BobG said:
I like calendar questions. For instance, we all know what happened in New York City on Sep 11, 2001, and quite a few know that roughly 2,602 people died that day. But, how many people died in New York City on Sep 11, 1752, and what happened to cause that particular number of deaths for that date?

Very cool question! Answer in white:
Nobody, Sep 11, 1752 didn't exist.

"Summary of the 1752 Calendar Change

31 December 1750 was followed by 1 January 1750
24 March 1750 was followed by 25 March 1751
31 December 1751 was followed by 1 January 1752
2 September 1752 was followed by 14 September 1752
31 December 1752 was followed by 1 January 1753"

From this site.
 
  • #15
Moonbear said:
Very cool question! Answer in white:
Nobody, Sep 11, 1752 didn't exist.

"Summary of the 1752 Calendar Change

31 December 1750 was followed by 1 January 1750
24 March 1750 was followed by 25 March 1751
31 December 1751 was followed by 1 January 1752
2 September 1752 was followed by 14 September 1752
31 December 1752 was followed by 1 January 1753"

From this site.

Wow...looks like some serious damage control in action. Nice bit of trivia :approve:

Not very long ago, over 500 people died in New York, all in one day. What caused this ?
 
Last edited:
  • #16
The Earth's rotation? Do 500 people die in New York everyday?
 
  • #17
tribdog said:
The Earth's rotation? Do 500 people die in New York everyday?

Yes, nearly...in the state, that is. :approve:
 
  • #18
What is with people and thinking that february 29th is somehow 'not there' on non leap years, anyways? It's a completely arbitrary place to put the extra day! It might as well be january 32!

Now stop saying you're 3 when you're actually 14. :mad:
 
  • #19
Alkatran said:
Now stop saying you're 3 when you're actually 14. :mad:

To "find" their birthday all they need do is add 365 and 1/4 days starting at the last 1/4 day of their day of brith. We all do the same thing just stating from a different 1/4 of the day.
OK - we'd need to get that down to the proper miniute of the day to take care of the Century thing. But most of us won't have "to live with that" error since it won't come up till 2100!

Extra note:
The above is a small adjustment to make compared to George Washington himself. He changed his bithday and birthyear to make his birthdays come out right.
If you go by his orginal birth record compared to his death record he would seem to have been a year and a 11 days older than he actually was.

I actually like the idea of NewYears Day on the first day of Spring!
Winter should be the end of the year.
Maybe we could convince the Pope to take out a few more days, move NewYears Day, and insert LeapDay as needed to make the change of seasons come on the first day each quarter. April1 - Spring & NewYears; July 1 Summer; October 1 Fall; Jan 1 Winter.
Nah, let's not even ask - All ready to many ideas for new calanders and the like floating around already.

RB
 
  • #20
I meant your 'age' should be defined by how many times the Earth went around the sun during your life, not by how many times the day that had the same number (28) and month (february) as the one you were born on.
 
  • #21
Alkatran said:
I meant your 'age' should be defined by how many times the Earth went around the sun during your life, not by how many times the day that had the same number (28) and month (february) as the one you were born on.
So you agree that the leap day baby is only on their Second Birthday at the end of there 8th year?? - - - I don't.

Everyone gets a Birthday every year (365 1/4 days). It's just shows up on March 1st for three years for them, that's all. Every one else is already doing the same thing - just happens to come out on the same calander day. Or you could use the Day of the week and be just as vaild - like the Last Sunday of every Febuary. Maybe I'll start keeping my birthday on the First Tuesday of Every June - it'd be just as valid.

If you want to pick out flaws in the problem - 'Gandpa' never said he was two just that he had not learned to blow out candles on the first Birthday he could remember when he was 8 years old. - BUT; Lots of kids not as bright as he remember blowing out candles on their birthday when they were 4.
And why would such a bright little guy never have been to one of his little friends bithdays & learned about blowing out candles. These make it much harder to solve the riddle and see the point.

And that point is - the Calander is interesting and odd.. But as odd as it is; it works for us so very well in so many ways it probable is the best set up for what we need science, business, or home.
RB
 
  • #22
no you are wrong, grandpa didn't have a birthday when he was 4. that's the point
 
  • #23
tribdog said:
no you are wrong, grandpa didn't have a birthday when he was 4. that's the point

The two of you are defining 'birthday' differently. For tribdog, it's the date and month that defines the birthday, while for randall, it's all times from the time of birth that are congrunt to zero modulo 365.25 days.
 

What does "Yes, all the information needed is there" mean?

"Yes, all the information needed is there" means that all the necessary data and details are present and available for a particular task, experiment, or analysis.

Why is it important to have all the information needed?

Having all the information needed is crucial because it ensures accuracy and reliability of results. Without complete data, conclusions and findings may be incomplete or incorrect.

How can one determine if all the information needed is present?

Determining if all the information needed is present can be done by carefully reviewing the set of data and comparing it with the objectives and requirements of the task. If all necessary elements are included, then the information is considered complete.

What should be done if there is missing information?

If there is missing information, it is important to try to obtain it through further research or experimentation. If it is not possible to obtain the missing data, it is important to acknowledge and address the limitations in the conclusion or analysis.

What are the consequences of not having all the information needed?

Not having all the information needed can lead to inaccurate or incomplete results, which can have serious consequences in scientific research and experiments. It can also hinder the progress and advancement of knowledge in a particular field.

Similar threads

  • General Discussion
Replies
24
Views
1K
  • General Discussion
Replies
2
Views
1K
  • General Discussion
Replies
3
Views
1K
Replies
17
Views
1K
  • General Discussion
Replies
14
Views
3K
  • General Discussion
Replies
6
Views
1K
  • General Discussion
Replies
6
Views
802
Replies
5
Views
2K
  • General Discussion
Replies
16
Views
2K
  • Art, Music, History, and Linguistics
Replies
1
Views
1K
Back
Top