MAGIC SQUARE: Calculate A*B*C
[5098] MAGIC SQUARE: Calculate A*B*C - The aim is to place the some numbers from the list (4, 6, 9, 19, 21, 24, 25, 27, 29, 32) into the empty squares and squares marked with A, B an C. Sum of each row and column should be equal. All the numbers of the magic square must be different. Find values for A, B, and C. Solution is A*B*C. - #brainteasers #math #magicsquare - Correct Answers: 21 - The first user who solved this task is Djordje Timotijevic
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MAGIC SQUARE: Calculate A*B*C

The aim is to place the some numbers from the list (4, 6, 9, 19, 21, 24, 25, 27, 29, 32) into the empty squares and squares marked with A, B an C. Sum of each row and column should be equal. All the numbers of the magic square must be different. Find values for A, B, and C. Solution is A*B*C.
Correct answers: 21
The first user who solved this task is Djordje Timotijevic.
#brainteasers #math #magicsquare
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Antonia Maury

Died 8 Jan 1952 at age 85 (born 21 Mar 1866). Antonia Coetana de Paiva Pereira Maury was an American astronomer and ornithologist whose painstaking classifications of stars by their spectra included elaborate work on 681 bright stars of the northern skies published in Annals of Harvard College Observatory (1896), a significant early catalog. Yet she was unappreciated by her observatory director, Edward C. Pickering. Her work was important in Ejnar Hertzsprung's verification of the distinction between dwarf stars and giant stars, as now seen in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram. After Pickering discovered the first spectroscopic binary star, Mizar, she was first to measure its period, 104 days. In 1889, she identified the second such star, Beta Aurigae, with a period of about 4 days. Antonia was the niece of astronomer Henry Draper, and the granddaughter of John William Draper who pioneered in the use of photography in astronomy.«
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