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Number magic trick
Number magic trick










number magic trick

So what would happen if we did that?Ī little thought, and running through the trick with different combinations, reveals the following observations: It could equally have been placed on the top or bottom, on each of the three deals. True mathematicians will at this point become curious – we placed the pile in the middle each time, but we didn’t have to do that. If the pile pointed out to you the third time is then placed in the middle, the card will be the middle card in the middle pile of three, or in other words, in the middle of the whole stack – which makes it the 14th card. This tells you which set of three cards (from the middles of the three piles) the card is in – and this set of three, if you place the pile in the middle again, will spread itself out as the middle card in each of the three piles on the third deal. Now imagine your volunteer indicates the right-hand pile. (Think about this a bit more if you’re not convinced.) Since we deal the cards across the three piles, this means your chosen card won’t be in the bottom three or top three cards of any of the three piles. This means that when you deal the second time, you know that the card you’re looking for isn’t in the first nine cards, or the last nine cards. When the cards are re-stacked, the pile containing your volunteer’s chosen card is placed in the middle. Imagine your volunteer indicates the card is in the left pile. First we need to understand what’s happened in our 14th-card version of the trick. But this trick has some interesting underlying mathematics, which can be used to perform an even more impressive version of the trick. Given that you know this is a mathematical card trick, it should make sense that as long as all the steps are followed correctly, you end up with the same result every time. You can try this trick and make sure it works – if it goes wrong, it’s usually a miscount (check you actually have 27 cards!), or a step somewhere that’s gone wrong, so try again or ask a friend to watch and make sure you’re doing it right. Count cards off from the top of the deck and turn over the 14th card (using the excuse that 13 is an unlucky number, so 14 must be a lucky number) – this should be your volunteer’s card.Repeat steps 3 and 4 two more times, so you’ve done the process three times in total.Pick up the three piles, and return them to a stack of 27 cards, but making sure you place the stack your volunteer indicated in between the other two.Ask your volunteer to watch for the card they picked – once you’ve finished dealing all the cards, they should tell you which pile it’s in. Deal the 27 cards into three face-up piles (placing one card in each pile, then repeating this 9 times).Ask a volunteer to shuffle the 27 cards, pick one, look at it, and return it to the stack (in its original position, or anywhere they like) – all without you seeing the card.Count out 27 cards from your deck, and put the rest away.If you’ve got a deck of playing cards handy, you can perform a trick to amuse people – and since it’s a mathematical card trick, you don’t need to be a magician to make it work! The trick

number magic trick

Often at this time of year, people are visiting family, and sometimes traditional games and toys come out to occupy your time.












Number magic trick