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 factorials, 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

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

Archive

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