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  • 2
    Nov
    2011
    1:41pm, EDT

    Happy Palindrome Day! (Again!)

    Aziz Inan explains this year's palindrome dates.

    Watch on YouTube
    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    If you're mathematically minded enough, every day can be a special day — it's just that today's date, 11-02-2011, makes it more obvious for palindrome fans. Like Aziz Inan, for instance.

    Inan, an engineering professor at the University of Portland, has made a study of dates that run the same numbers forward and backward. Several studies, in fact. Such combinations are considered numerical palindromes, much like the alphabetical palindromes that delight puzzle fans. (One of the most famous examples is the Garden of Eden's first introduction: "Madam, I'm Adam.")


    This year has several date-based palindromes, depending on how you structure them: 1-10-2011, 1-11-11, 11-1-11 ... and if you go by the DD/MM/YYYY notation, Feb. 11 already marked 11-02-2011. Inan told the Los Angeles Times that today (or Feb. 11, if your calendar swings differently) is extra special because 11,022,011 equals another palindrome, 1001 X 11 X 1001.

    Aziz Inan / Univ. of Portland

    Aziz Inan, an engineering professor at the University of Portland, demonstrates the palindromosity of 11-02-2011 with a little help from a mirror image (and Cookie Monster).

    "This is so much fun," Inan told the Times. "Engineering can get pretty boring because you talk about equations, but when I say, 'Do you know today is a special date?' it gets a lot of attention. It helps me change the subject for a few minutes and bring the students back from their dream or their hibernating."

    Next year's Palindrome Days are Feb. 10 (2-10-2012), Feb. 21 (21-02-2012 in day/month/year) and Oct. 2 (2-10-2012 in day/month/year). Then there's 02-02-2020 — which is particularly notable not only because it's the next eight-digit palindrome date but also because it works whether you go with MM/DD/YYYY notation or DD/MM/YYYY.

    But you don't have to wait all that long for the mother of all monodigital dates, which comes next week on Veterans Day. What will you be doing at 11:11 on 11-11-11? Going to the movies?

    Correction for 3:35 p.m. ET: I originally wrote that Aziz's last name was "Anin," but the University of Portland pointed out that it's actually "Inan." Which is disappointing, because I was hoping he'd be the perfect palindromic match for Nina Ziza. The good news is that there's a Nani Ziza out there as well. I've also fixed another glitch: I originally referred to 11-02-2010 as Feb. 2 in day/month/year notation instead of the proper Feb. 11. Sorry about both those errors.

    More calendrical fun:

    • Pies fly on Pi Day
    • The science of leap time
    • Scientific shifts go beyond the zodiac
    • The Maya and 2012: It's only a calendar

    Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding me to your Google+ circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.

    15 comments

    I always love when numerical palindromes show up in my job. Unfortunately my colleagues don't share my enthusiasm and find it strange that I'd even take notice of such things. And I never even told them about the times I look for them in the counter when I'm watching DVDs.

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    Explore related topics: science, 2012, featured, mathematics, palindrome

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