The following entries were tagged with “food”. They are displayed with the most recent entries first. (1–2)

Rice Rice Baby

Posted in and on Tue, 13th Mar 2007 at 21:21

Did you ever hear the old Chinese story about the rice and the chessboard? The specifics are hazy, and I'm sure there are lots of variations anyway, but I remember the important details. Someone having performed some important task for the king asked that he be paid in rice. The king was to put one grain of rice on the first square of a chessboard, two on the next, four on the next and so on to fill the board with each square containing twice as much rice as the previous one. How much rice do you think this adds up to?

The answer is easy to calculate but difficult to imagine. There are 2N - 1 grains on the Nth square. 20 = 1 on the first, 21 = 2 on the second, 22 = 4 on the third, and so on. The last square, number 64, has , 263 = 9x1018 grains on it. That's a nine followed by 18 zeros or nine billion billion. Let's try to cut that down to something we can imagine.

There are about 2000 grains, give or take, in a reasonable portion of rice. If a person eats one portion every day she will eat 730,000 grains a year. That last square will feed her for about 1013 (ten thousand billion) years. I think we need to cut it down further.

There are six billion people alive right now. If they all loved rice as much as the example person in the previous paragraph and consumed it at the same rate of 730000 grains a year it would take about 2000 years to eat it all. The only problem is that none of us will live that long. We could eat it at twice the rate, say two portions a day each, but that will only reduce it to 1000 years. We need more people.

It's estimated that there have been somewhere in the region of 100 billion people ever. Let's assume that they all loved rice and would want to eat two portions a day for their entire lives. So we have 100 billion people each eating 1460000 grains of rice per year. How long would it last?

263 grains / (1011 people * 1460000 grains per person per year) = 63 years, a lot more than the average lifespan for most of human history. That single square of rice would comfortably feed two portions a day to every person who has ever lived for their entire life.

The rest of the board contains the same amount again (less one grain).

Comments:
Wed, 14th Mar 2007 (00:43)

And, what if your family don't like rice? They like… cigarettes?

by Eoghan
Wed, 14th Mar 2007 (10:17)

Whats a chinese person? Whats a murder? We do need more people, fortunately because of the origin of that story, the chinese have known this for a long time, and so to help us have begun exporting their largest natural resource as well as cultivating replacement stock.

Thu, 15th Mar 2007 (11:23)

If you take the average portion of rice for a person (50g) to be equal to the weight of 2000 grains, what will be the weight on the final square?

Also, lets say the average chess board has a a single playing square area of 5.5cm^2, and a grain of rice (to be easy lets say it's a cuboid) has an area of 1.5mm^3 (6mm X 0.5mm X 0.5mm, indian rice has a length of between 5.8mm and 6.0mm), how high will the rice on the final stack be?

For the engineer in you: what type of material would the chess board have to be made of to support that weight on one square?

Thu, 15th Mar 2007 (23:03)

Vibrainium … the same stuff as Captain Americas (RIP) shield

by Ronan Lowe

Pancakes

Posted in and on Tue, 20th Feb 2007 at 23:04

I'm living on my own at the moment (brother in Australia, parents in Spain) so it fell to me to prepare my own Pancake Day pancakes. Pancakes by Rory, of Rory and for Rory. Actually, political allusions aside you should probably ignore that middle one. Pancakes of Rory? No, that's gross.

Anyway, I made the batter this morning (read: "early afternoon"; I'm unemployed and living alone) before my massive mid-afternoon productivity spree (read: "late afternoon"). Then I rewarded myself with a big pile of pancakes for a combined lunch/dinner. Since I had no-one to fob the crap ones off on it was imperative (read: "desirable") that each and every pancake turn out well, so I confess to being quite proud that even the first was of top-notch quality. The following five were comparably awesome. The rest are in the fridge for breakfast tomorrow morning.

I'm sure I had a more important point than "check out my mad pancake skillz" but I've forgotten it in all this confusion. Sorry.

Comments:
Wed, 21st Feb 2007 (13:54)

Dude, you have achieved coolness!