The Chinese Remainder Clock

program

Licenses

Source code

Submitted by

Contributors

IdeaAntonella Perucca (University of Luxembourg)
ProgrammingDaniel Ramos (IMAGINARY)
TextsDaniel Ramos (IMAGINARY)

Supported by

University of Luxembourg

Discover and learn about the Chinese Remainder Theorem using clocks.

Why do clocks measure the hours in sets of 12, repeating the numbers after 12 hours? And why minutes and seconds are grouped in sets of 60? Well, mostly by convenience and historical reasons, but mathematically we could make clocks whose hands make a full turn every 3 hours, or 4 hours, or any number of hours we wish, and likewise with the minutes and seconds.

Would we have the same information as with our usual 12-hours and 60-minutes clocks? Could we translate from one to another?

Discover the Chinese Remainder Clock and its surprising arithmetic properties.

Main File

Repository

Files