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A126275 Moment of inertia of all magic squares of order n. +0
3
5, 60, 340, 1300, 3885, 9800, 21840, 44280, 83325 (list; graph; listen)
OFFSET

2,1

COMMENT

"This is the only property of magic squares, aside from the line sums, which is solely dependent on the order of the square, n," Loly and Adam Rogers note in a paper published in 2004 in the Canadian Undergraduate Physics Journal.

Loly investigated the "physical" properties of magic squares, treating the numbers of each such square as physical quantities. If the integers are consecutive numbers from 1 to n^2, the square is said to be of n-th order. The magic sum itself is given by n(n^2 + 1)/2.

Suppose you interpret the numbers as masses. You can then determine a magic square's moment of inertia about a given axis of rotation. For any specific case, you obtain the moment of inertia, In, of a magic square of order n about an axis at right angles to its center by summing mr^2 for each cell, where m is the number centered in a cell and r is the distance of the center of that cell from the center of the square measured in units of the nearest neighbor distance.

You find that the moment of inertia, I_z, about the square's center (an axis at right angles to the square) is twice the moment of inertia about an axis of rotation along the center row or column.

LINKS

Peter Loly, The invariance of the moment of inertia of magic squares, Mathematical Gazette 88(March 2004):151-153

Ivars Peterson, Magic Square Physics. Science News online, Jul 01, 2006; Vol. 170, No. 1

FORMULA

a(n) = (n^2 * (n^4 - 1))/12.

CROSSREFS

Sequence in context: A132549 A091457 A100906 this_sequence A059602 A099672 A093885

Adjacent sequences: A126272 A126273 A126274 this_sequence A126276 A126277 A126278

KEYWORD

easy,nonn

AUTHOR

Jonathan Vos Post (jvospost2(AT)yahoo.com), Dec 23 2006

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Last modified August 19 23:53 EDT 2008. Contains 142930 sequences.


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