What are the Permutations of the word 'Saskatchewan'?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Dooga Blackrazor
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Permutations
AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the permutations of the word "Saskatchewan," which consists of 12 letters, including repetitions of the letters "a" and "s." The correct formula for the total permutations is 12!/(3!2!), accounting for the indistinguishable letters. Clarifications are provided regarding the calculations of factorials, specifically that 6! equals 720 and 8!/9! simplifies to 1/9. Examples of permutations for other words like "interesting" and "Mississippi" are also given, emphasizing the need to consider letter repetitions. Understanding this concept is crucial for accurately determining the number of arrangements for any set of letters.
Dooga Blackrazor
Messages
258
Reaction score
0
I missed the day when my teacher went over Permutations. If someone could help me with the questions below, that would be great.

What are the Permutations of the word "Saskatchewan"?

10 PrN(right?) 6 = The amount of different ways 10 units can be organized into 6 units?

6! = 6 x 5, 6 x 4 ... 6 x 1

8! / 9! = ? What is the purpose of using this and what does it mean?

Thanks~
 
Physics news on Phys.org
You must account for the repetitions of letters in the word.
 
"Saskatchewan" has 12 letters. If they were all different, the answer would be 12!

However, three of the letters are "a", 2 of the letters are "s" (we don't treat the "S" and "s" as different, do we?) so we could swap the "a"s around without changing the actual word- there are 3! ways to do that. Since we don't want to count those as different, we need to divide by 3! to cancel those. There are 2! ways swap only the "s"s so we also need to divide by 2!: The total number of ways to permute "Saskatchewan" is 12!/(3!2!) (or 12!/3! if the "S" and "s" are considered different.

No, 6! is not what you say: 6!= 6x 5x 4x 3x 2x 1 = 720.

8!/9! = 8x7x6x5x4x3x2x1/9x8x7x6x5x4x3x2x1= 1/9 since everything else cancels out.

I have no idea what your purpose is in using it!
 
How many ways can the letters of the following words be arranged?

Saskatchewan = 39916800
interesting = 2494800
Mississippi = 34650

I need to know how to find those answers. Thanks for your help so far. I'm going to take my Math book upstairs in a bit and stare at it for awhile, that might help.
 
The problem is equivalent to arranging P things of which m are alike of one kind, n are alike of another kind, and so on. As mentioned by Sirus earlier, you must account for the repititions in the letters. Once you know how to do this the general way is to plug the values of P, m, n etc into the formula. Since you have trouble understanding how it works, consider the total number of permutations of a word containing x alphabets (of which some may be alike and others distinct) which is x!. If there is at least one alphabet which repeats (say Q) then you will end up with permutations like QQ...or ...QQ... and so on. You can see that the Q's when together can be permuted or arranged in only one way because all of them are identical. But saying that x! is the total number of ways therefore includes these identical arrangements which we must weed out. Thats why you divide by the product of the factorials of the number of different alike things.
 
Kindly see the attached pdf. My attempt to solve it, is in it. I'm wondering if my solution is right. My idea is this: At any point of time, the ball may be assumed to be at an incline which is at an angle of θ(kindly see both the pics in the pdf file). The value of θ will continuously change and so will the value of friction. I'm not able to figure out, why my solution is wrong, if it is wrong .
Thread 'Correct statement about a reservoir with an outlet pipe'
The answer to this question is statements (ii) and (iv) are correct. (i) This is FALSE because the speed of water in the tap is greater than speed at the water surface (ii) I don't even understand this statement. What does the "seal" part have to do with water flowing out? Won't the water still flow out through the tap until the tank is empty whether the reservoir is sealed or not? (iii) In my opinion, this statement would be correct. Increasing the gravitational potential energy of the...
Thread 'A bead-mass oscillatory system problem'
I can't figure out how to find the velocity of the particle at 37 degrees. Basically the bead moves with velocity towards right let's call it v1. The particle moves with some velocity v2. In frame of the bead, the particle is performing circular motion. So v of particle wrt bead would be perpendicular to the string. But how would I find the velocity of particle in ground frame? I tried using vectors to figure it out and the angle is coming out to be extremely long. One equation is by work...

Similar threads

Back
Top