mscroggs.co.uk
mscroggs.co.uk

subscribe

Puzzles

Square factorials

Source: Woody at Maths Jam
Multiply together the first 100 factorials:
$$1!\times2!\times3!\times...\times100!$$
Find a number, \(n\), such that dividing this product by \(n!\) produces a square number.

Show answer & extension

If you enjoyed this puzzle, check out Sunday Afternoon Maths LVII,
puzzles about square numbers, or a random puzzle.

Archive

Show me a random puzzle
 Most recent collections 

Advent calendar 2023

Advent calendar 2022

Advent calendar 2021

Advent calendar 2020


List of all puzzles

Tags

spheres arrows percentages coordinates planes sport floors people maths bases palindromes irreducible numbers taxicab geometry tiling sums crosswords cryptic clues routes averages remainders clocks pentagons area ellipses christmas combinatorics binary differentiation digital products consecutive numbers mean crossnumbers median division addition odd numbers circles means geometry volume graphs chalkdust crossnumber geometric mean probabilty number rugby indices ave dice perfect numbers complex numbers gerrymandering polygons the only crossnumber even numbers calculus sum to infinity consecutive integers parabolas multiplication proportion menace rectangles 3d shapes products books square roots games sets quadrilaterals shapes scales probability angles speed decahedra dominos shape albgebra square numbers integers balancing coins tangents triangle numbers sequences hexagons perimeter unit fractions star numbers symmetry advent grids prime numbers elections multiples integration logic surds digital clocks pascal's triangle expansions chocolate quadratics triangles crossnumber digits trigonometry polynomials doubling wordplay factors regular shapes factorials dates fractions lines colouring partitions folding tube maps 2d shapes geometric means cards functions money chess algebra numbers determinants matrices dodecagons tournaments cubics squares range axes cryptic crossnumbers time cube numbers

Archive

Show me a random puzzle
▼ show ▼
© Matthew Scroggs 2012–2024