Hour & Minute Coprime: Frequency & Examples

  • Thread starter Thread starter BenVitale
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Frequency
AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on how many times a day the hour and minute are coprime, with participants exploring both 12-hour and 24-hour clock formats. It is clarified that there are significant differences in the counts based on the clock type. For a 24-hour clock, there are 865 out of 1440 combinations where the hour and minute are coprime, while for a 12-hour clock, the count rises to 894 out of 1440. Additionally, when considering the seconds along with the hour and minute, the coprime counts increase significantly, with 24-hour and 12-hour clocks yielding 24,594 and 25,252 coprime combinations respectively. The conversation also touches on the importance of excluding zero from the calculations and the distinction between analog and digital time formats, although the rationale for this distinction remains unclear to some participants.
BenVitale
Messages
72
Reaction score
1
How many times a day are the hour and minute coprime?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Answer
22
 
Caracrist said:
Answer
22

If I understand correctly, it's a lot more than that! There are 30 times within the hour of 2:00-2:59 alone that are co-prime!

Is this question meant on a 24-hour clock or a 12-hour clock?

DaveE
 
Caracrist said:
Answer
22

Sorry. This is wrong.

davee123 said:
If I understand correctly, it's a lot more than that! There are 30 times within the hour of 2:00-2:59 alone that are co-prime!

Is this question meant on a 24-hour clock or a 12-hour clock?

DaveE

Right. There are more than that.

You need to consider 2 cases:
- Analog time
- Digital time

And, you need to exclude 0.


Perhaps, I was wrong to post this question in this forum. Could the moderators transfer/repost this thread in the "Number Theory" forum?
 
BenVitale said:
You need to consider 2 cases:
- Analog time
- Digital time

I'm not sure I understand why Analog and Digital time would be different, unless you mean a 24-hour digital clock (IE, one that says 23:17 rather than 11:17pm). If we're talking a 12-hour clock, then the answer is all the coprime times in the range 1:00-12:59, then doubled. If we're talking a 24-hour clock, then it's just all the coprime times in the range 00:00-23:59.

BenVitale said:
And, you need to exclude 0.

I'm not sure I understand why? My reference being Wikipedia:

"The numbers 1 and −1 are coprime to every integer, and they are the only integers to be coprime with 0."

Hence, in a 24-hour clock, ALL the minutes from 00:00-00:59 are coprime, excluding 00:01.

BenVitale said:
Perhaps, I was wrong to post this question in this forum. Could the moderators transfer/repost this thread in the "Number Theory" forum?

I dunno, word problems frequently go here, although I'm not sure what the official stance on them is.

DaveE
 
davee123 said:
Hence, in a 24-hour clock, ALL the minutes from 00:00-00:59 are coprime, excluding 00:01.

Whoops, got that backwards-- none of the minutes from 00:00-00:59 are coprime, except for 00:01, but ALL of the minutes from 01:00-01:59 are coprime.

Since there seems to be no resolution, here's both answers:

24-hour clock: 865/1440 times per day are coprime

12-hour clock: 894/1440 times per day are coprime (or 447/720 distinct combinations)

And how about the hour, minute, and seconds all being coprime of each other?

24-hour clock: 24594/86400 times per day are coprime

12-hour clock: 25252/86400 times per day are coprime (or 12626/43200 distinct combinations)

DaveE
 
Similar to the 2024 thread, here I start the 2025 thread. As always it is getting increasingly difficult to predict, so I will make a list based on other article predictions. You can also leave your prediction here. Here are the predictions of 2024 that did not make it: Peter Shor, David Deutsch and all the rest of the quantum computing community (various sources) Pablo Jarrillo Herrero, Allan McDonald and Rafi Bistritzer for magic angle in twisted graphene (various sources) Christoph...
Thread 'My experience as a hostage'
I believe it was the summer of 2001 that I made a trip to Peru for my work. I was a private contractor doing automation engineering and programming for various companies, including Frito Lay. Frito had purchased a snack food plant near Lima, Peru, and sent me down to oversee the upgrades to the systems and the startup. Peru was still suffering the ills of a recent civil war and I knew it was dicey, but the money was too good to pass up. It was a long trip to Lima; about 14 hours of airtime...
Back
Top