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I'm largest when I'm five, what am I?


Can you pass through the ancient tomb? Find the correct interpretation for the symbolsWhen I'm bitten, what am I?Five Clues In Four linesI wave when you don't, and when you doI'm a messenger - Clue FiveDon't shed a tear when I'm goneWhen did Billy take aim?What am I: When things get serious, I'm upside-downIn the top five, I'm odd






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty
margin-bottom:0;

.everyonelovesstackoverflowposition:absolute;height:1px;width:1px;opacity:0;top:0;left:0;pointer-events:none;








37















$begingroup$



I'm very common and often you see me,

Everything's believed to be made of me.


Make no mistake, I look largest when I'm seven,

But I'm largest when I'm five, it is proven.


But alas at those ages you've never seen me,

For you've seen me only when I'm three.


Unlike you mortals who grow old and die,

I keep shrinking and shriveling by and by,


I don't die when I'm seventy, eighty or ninety,

I only kneel and perish after the infinity.




What am I?










share|improve this question









$endgroup$










  • 2




    $begingroup$
    From the title I guessed "an open hand with five digits extended", but the text went somewhere completely different.
    $endgroup$
    – Criggie
    Oct 4 at 2:44

















37















$begingroup$



I'm very common and often you see me,

Everything's believed to be made of me.


Make no mistake, I look largest when I'm seven,

But I'm largest when I'm five, it is proven.


But alas at those ages you've never seen me,

For you've seen me only when I'm three.


Unlike you mortals who grow old and die,

I keep shrinking and shriveling by and by,


I don't die when I'm seventy, eighty or ninety,

I only kneel and perish after the infinity.




What am I?










share|improve this question









$endgroup$










  • 2




    $begingroup$
    From the title I guessed "an open hand with five digits extended", but the text went somewhere completely different.
    $endgroup$
    – Criggie
    Oct 4 at 2:44













37













37









37


5



$begingroup$



I'm very common and often you see me,

Everything's believed to be made of me.


Make no mistake, I look largest when I'm seven,

But I'm largest when I'm five, it is proven.


But alas at those ages you've never seen me,

For you've seen me only when I'm three.


Unlike you mortals who grow old and die,

I keep shrinking and shriveling by and by,


I don't die when I'm seventy, eighty or ninety,

I only kneel and perish after the infinity.




What am I?










share|improve this question









$endgroup$





I'm very common and often you see me,

Everything's believed to be made of me.


Make no mistake, I look largest when I'm seven,

But I'm largest when I'm five, it is proven.


But alas at those ages you've never seen me,

For you've seen me only when I'm three.


Unlike you mortals who grow old and die,

I keep shrinking and shriveling by and by,


I don't die when I'm seventy, eighty or ninety,

I only kneel and perish after the infinity.




What am I?







riddle mathematics poetry






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Oct 2 at 13:38









ZoirZoir

1,2395 silver badges21 bronze badges




1,2395 silver badges21 bronze badges










  • 2




    $begingroup$
    From the title I guessed "an open hand with five digits extended", but the text went somewhere completely different.
    $endgroup$
    – Criggie
    Oct 4 at 2:44












  • 2




    $begingroup$
    From the title I guessed "an open hand with five digits extended", but the text went somewhere completely different.
    $endgroup$
    – Criggie
    Oct 4 at 2:44







2




2




$begingroup$
From the title I guessed "an open hand with five digits extended", but the text went somewhere completely different.
$endgroup$
– Criggie
Oct 4 at 2:44




$begingroup$
From the title I guessed "an open hand with five digits extended", but the text went somewhere completely different.
$endgroup$
– Criggie
Oct 4 at 2:44










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















42

















$begingroup$

My guess:




An n-dimensional sphere.




I'm very common and often you see me,




There are lots of spheres




Everything's believed to be made of me.




This could refer to the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bohr_model of atoms...




Make no mistake, I look largest when I'm seven,



But I'm largest when I'm five, it is proven.



That was one of the keys:




As the diagram at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypersphere shows: The surface of the sphere is largest in dimension 7. But the volume reaches its peak at dimension 5.




But alas at those ages you've never seen me,



For you've seen me only when I'm three.




We can see a sphere only (or at most) in 3 dimensions




Unlike you mortals who grow old and die,



I keep shrinking and shriveling by and by,



I don't die when I'm seventy, eighty or ninety,



I only kneel and perish after the infinity.




The surface and the volume of an n-dimensional sphere approach zero when n goes towards infinity. Even at 70 or 80 dimensions, there's hardly anything left.







share|improve this answer










$endgroup$









  • 3




    $begingroup$
    I'd be surprised if this isnt it.
    $endgroup$
    – Certainly not a dog
    Oct 2 at 15:55






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Correct, well done :) Will accept in a bit!
    $endgroup$
    – Zoir
    Oct 2 at 15:56






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    (I meant the second line to be rot13(ryrpgebaf, cebgbaf, naq arhgebaf) as they are widely believed to be spherical but certainly your interpretation would work too)
    $endgroup$
    – Zoir
    Oct 2 at 16:03






  • 16




    $begingroup$
    It's worth noting that statements like "the n dimensional sphere has largest volume in dimension 5" are only true for spheres of radius 1. Spheres of radius 2 are largest in dimension 24. Spheres of radius 3 are largest in dimension 56. The truth, as boring as it may be, is that it is meaningless to compare volumes of different dimensions. You wouldn't say that the volume of a sphere is larger than the area of a circle because volume and area have different units. For the same reason, it is nonsensical to say that a 5-dimensional sphere has larger volume than a sphere in any other dimension.
    $endgroup$
    – Brady Gilg
    Oct 2 at 22:04






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @BradyGilg True, but although I have some affinity towards mathematics and preciseness, I didn't go the extra mile of talking about the "n-dimensional unit-sphere" or something like a ~"dimensionless measure of volume". It was a good riddle, IMHO (and I spent more time than I'd like to admit reading about things like regular polytopes, symmetries, and honeycombs, while hunting for the answer ;-))
    $endgroup$
    – Marco13
    Oct 2 at 22:18












Your Answer








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Post as a guest















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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









42

















$begingroup$

My guess:




An n-dimensional sphere.




I'm very common and often you see me,




There are lots of spheres




Everything's believed to be made of me.




This could refer to the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bohr_model of atoms...




Make no mistake, I look largest when I'm seven,



But I'm largest when I'm five, it is proven.



That was one of the keys:




As the diagram at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypersphere shows: The surface of the sphere is largest in dimension 7. But the volume reaches its peak at dimension 5.




But alas at those ages you've never seen me,



For you've seen me only when I'm three.




We can see a sphere only (or at most) in 3 dimensions




Unlike you mortals who grow old and die,



I keep shrinking and shriveling by and by,



I don't die when I'm seventy, eighty or ninety,



I only kneel and perish after the infinity.




The surface and the volume of an n-dimensional sphere approach zero when n goes towards infinity. Even at 70 or 80 dimensions, there's hardly anything left.







share|improve this answer










$endgroup$









  • 3




    $begingroup$
    I'd be surprised if this isnt it.
    $endgroup$
    – Certainly not a dog
    Oct 2 at 15:55






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Correct, well done :) Will accept in a bit!
    $endgroup$
    – Zoir
    Oct 2 at 15:56






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    (I meant the second line to be rot13(ryrpgebaf, cebgbaf, naq arhgebaf) as they are widely believed to be spherical but certainly your interpretation would work too)
    $endgroup$
    – Zoir
    Oct 2 at 16:03






  • 16




    $begingroup$
    It's worth noting that statements like "the n dimensional sphere has largest volume in dimension 5" are only true for spheres of radius 1. Spheres of radius 2 are largest in dimension 24. Spheres of radius 3 are largest in dimension 56. The truth, as boring as it may be, is that it is meaningless to compare volumes of different dimensions. You wouldn't say that the volume of a sphere is larger than the area of a circle because volume and area have different units. For the same reason, it is nonsensical to say that a 5-dimensional sphere has larger volume than a sphere in any other dimension.
    $endgroup$
    – Brady Gilg
    Oct 2 at 22:04






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @BradyGilg True, but although I have some affinity towards mathematics and preciseness, I didn't go the extra mile of talking about the "n-dimensional unit-sphere" or something like a ~"dimensionless measure of volume". It was a good riddle, IMHO (and I spent more time than I'd like to admit reading about things like regular polytopes, symmetries, and honeycombs, while hunting for the answer ;-))
    $endgroup$
    – Marco13
    Oct 2 at 22:18















42

















$begingroup$

My guess:




An n-dimensional sphere.




I'm very common and often you see me,




There are lots of spheres




Everything's believed to be made of me.




This could refer to the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bohr_model of atoms...




Make no mistake, I look largest when I'm seven,



But I'm largest when I'm five, it is proven.



That was one of the keys:




As the diagram at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypersphere shows: The surface of the sphere is largest in dimension 7. But the volume reaches its peak at dimension 5.




But alas at those ages you've never seen me,



For you've seen me only when I'm three.




We can see a sphere only (or at most) in 3 dimensions




Unlike you mortals who grow old and die,



I keep shrinking and shriveling by and by,



I don't die when I'm seventy, eighty or ninety,



I only kneel and perish after the infinity.




The surface and the volume of an n-dimensional sphere approach zero when n goes towards infinity. Even at 70 or 80 dimensions, there's hardly anything left.







share|improve this answer










$endgroup$









  • 3




    $begingroup$
    I'd be surprised if this isnt it.
    $endgroup$
    – Certainly not a dog
    Oct 2 at 15:55






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Correct, well done :) Will accept in a bit!
    $endgroup$
    – Zoir
    Oct 2 at 15:56






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    (I meant the second line to be rot13(ryrpgebaf, cebgbaf, naq arhgebaf) as they are widely believed to be spherical but certainly your interpretation would work too)
    $endgroup$
    – Zoir
    Oct 2 at 16:03






  • 16




    $begingroup$
    It's worth noting that statements like "the n dimensional sphere has largest volume in dimension 5" are only true for spheres of radius 1. Spheres of radius 2 are largest in dimension 24. Spheres of radius 3 are largest in dimension 56. The truth, as boring as it may be, is that it is meaningless to compare volumes of different dimensions. You wouldn't say that the volume of a sphere is larger than the area of a circle because volume and area have different units. For the same reason, it is nonsensical to say that a 5-dimensional sphere has larger volume than a sphere in any other dimension.
    $endgroup$
    – Brady Gilg
    Oct 2 at 22:04






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @BradyGilg True, but although I have some affinity towards mathematics and preciseness, I didn't go the extra mile of talking about the "n-dimensional unit-sphere" or something like a ~"dimensionless measure of volume". It was a good riddle, IMHO (and I spent more time than I'd like to admit reading about things like regular polytopes, symmetries, and honeycombs, while hunting for the answer ;-))
    $endgroup$
    – Marco13
    Oct 2 at 22:18













42















42











42







$begingroup$

My guess:




An n-dimensional sphere.




I'm very common and often you see me,




There are lots of spheres




Everything's believed to be made of me.




This could refer to the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bohr_model of atoms...




Make no mistake, I look largest when I'm seven,



But I'm largest when I'm five, it is proven.



That was one of the keys:




As the diagram at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypersphere shows: The surface of the sphere is largest in dimension 7. But the volume reaches its peak at dimension 5.




But alas at those ages you've never seen me,



For you've seen me only when I'm three.




We can see a sphere only (or at most) in 3 dimensions




Unlike you mortals who grow old and die,



I keep shrinking and shriveling by and by,



I don't die when I'm seventy, eighty or ninety,



I only kneel and perish after the infinity.




The surface and the volume of an n-dimensional sphere approach zero when n goes towards infinity. Even at 70 or 80 dimensions, there's hardly anything left.







share|improve this answer










$endgroup$



My guess:




An n-dimensional sphere.




I'm very common and often you see me,




There are lots of spheres




Everything's believed to be made of me.




This could refer to the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bohr_model of atoms...




Make no mistake, I look largest when I'm seven,



But I'm largest when I'm five, it is proven.



That was one of the keys:




As the diagram at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypersphere shows: The surface of the sphere is largest in dimension 7. But the volume reaches its peak at dimension 5.




But alas at those ages you've never seen me,



For you've seen me only when I'm three.




We can see a sphere only (or at most) in 3 dimensions




Unlike you mortals who grow old and die,



I keep shrinking and shriveling by and by,



I don't die when I'm seventy, eighty or ninety,



I only kneel and perish after the infinity.




The surface and the volume of an n-dimensional sphere approach zero when n goes towards infinity. Even at 70 or 80 dimensions, there's hardly anything left.








share|improve this answer













share|improve this answer




share|improve this answer










answered Oct 2 at 15:01









Marco13Marco13

1,6509 silver badges17 bronze badges




1,6509 silver badges17 bronze badges










  • 3




    $begingroup$
    I'd be surprised if this isnt it.
    $endgroup$
    – Certainly not a dog
    Oct 2 at 15:55






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Correct, well done :) Will accept in a bit!
    $endgroup$
    – Zoir
    Oct 2 at 15:56






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    (I meant the second line to be rot13(ryrpgebaf, cebgbaf, naq arhgebaf) as they are widely believed to be spherical but certainly your interpretation would work too)
    $endgroup$
    – Zoir
    Oct 2 at 16:03






  • 16




    $begingroup$
    It's worth noting that statements like "the n dimensional sphere has largest volume in dimension 5" are only true for spheres of radius 1. Spheres of radius 2 are largest in dimension 24. Spheres of radius 3 are largest in dimension 56. The truth, as boring as it may be, is that it is meaningless to compare volumes of different dimensions. You wouldn't say that the volume of a sphere is larger than the area of a circle because volume and area have different units. For the same reason, it is nonsensical to say that a 5-dimensional sphere has larger volume than a sphere in any other dimension.
    $endgroup$
    – Brady Gilg
    Oct 2 at 22:04






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @BradyGilg True, but although I have some affinity towards mathematics and preciseness, I didn't go the extra mile of talking about the "n-dimensional unit-sphere" or something like a ~"dimensionless measure of volume". It was a good riddle, IMHO (and I spent more time than I'd like to admit reading about things like regular polytopes, symmetries, and honeycombs, while hunting for the answer ;-))
    $endgroup$
    – Marco13
    Oct 2 at 22:18












  • 3




    $begingroup$
    I'd be surprised if this isnt it.
    $endgroup$
    – Certainly not a dog
    Oct 2 at 15:55






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Correct, well done :) Will accept in a bit!
    $endgroup$
    – Zoir
    Oct 2 at 15:56






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    (I meant the second line to be rot13(ryrpgebaf, cebgbaf, naq arhgebaf) as they are widely believed to be spherical but certainly your interpretation would work too)
    $endgroup$
    – Zoir
    Oct 2 at 16:03






  • 16




    $begingroup$
    It's worth noting that statements like "the n dimensional sphere has largest volume in dimension 5" are only true for spheres of radius 1. Spheres of radius 2 are largest in dimension 24. Spheres of radius 3 are largest in dimension 56. The truth, as boring as it may be, is that it is meaningless to compare volumes of different dimensions. You wouldn't say that the volume of a sphere is larger than the area of a circle because volume and area have different units. For the same reason, it is nonsensical to say that a 5-dimensional sphere has larger volume than a sphere in any other dimension.
    $endgroup$
    – Brady Gilg
    Oct 2 at 22:04






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @BradyGilg True, but although I have some affinity towards mathematics and preciseness, I didn't go the extra mile of talking about the "n-dimensional unit-sphere" or something like a ~"dimensionless measure of volume". It was a good riddle, IMHO (and I spent more time than I'd like to admit reading about things like regular polytopes, symmetries, and honeycombs, while hunting for the answer ;-))
    $endgroup$
    – Marco13
    Oct 2 at 22:18







3




3




$begingroup$
I'd be surprised if this isnt it.
$endgroup$
– Certainly not a dog
Oct 2 at 15:55




$begingroup$
I'd be surprised if this isnt it.
$endgroup$
– Certainly not a dog
Oct 2 at 15:55




2




2




$begingroup$
Correct, well done :) Will accept in a bit!
$endgroup$
– Zoir
Oct 2 at 15:56




$begingroup$
Correct, well done :) Will accept in a bit!
$endgroup$
– Zoir
Oct 2 at 15:56




1




1




$begingroup$
(I meant the second line to be rot13(ryrpgebaf, cebgbaf, naq arhgebaf) as they are widely believed to be spherical but certainly your interpretation would work too)
$endgroup$
– Zoir
Oct 2 at 16:03




$begingroup$
(I meant the second line to be rot13(ryrpgebaf, cebgbaf, naq arhgebaf) as they are widely believed to be spherical but certainly your interpretation would work too)
$endgroup$
– Zoir
Oct 2 at 16:03




16




16




$begingroup$
It's worth noting that statements like "the n dimensional sphere has largest volume in dimension 5" are only true for spheres of radius 1. Spheres of radius 2 are largest in dimension 24. Spheres of radius 3 are largest in dimension 56. The truth, as boring as it may be, is that it is meaningless to compare volumes of different dimensions. You wouldn't say that the volume of a sphere is larger than the area of a circle because volume and area have different units. For the same reason, it is nonsensical to say that a 5-dimensional sphere has larger volume than a sphere in any other dimension.
$endgroup$
– Brady Gilg
Oct 2 at 22:04




$begingroup$
It's worth noting that statements like "the n dimensional sphere has largest volume in dimension 5" are only true for spheres of radius 1. Spheres of radius 2 are largest in dimension 24. Spheres of radius 3 are largest in dimension 56. The truth, as boring as it may be, is that it is meaningless to compare volumes of different dimensions. You wouldn't say that the volume of a sphere is larger than the area of a circle because volume and area have different units. For the same reason, it is nonsensical to say that a 5-dimensional sphere has larger volume than a sphere in any other dimension.
$endgroup$
– Brady Gilg
Oct 2 at 22:04




2




2




$begingroup$
@BradyGilg True, but although I have some affinity towards mathematics and preciseness, I didn't go the extra mile of talking about the "n-dimensional unit-sphere" or something like a ~"dimensionless measure of volume". It was a good riddle, IMHO (and I spent more time than I'd like to admit reading about things like regular polytopes, symmetries, and honeycombs, while hunting for the answer ;-))
$endgroup$
– Marco13
Oct 2 at 22:18




$begingroup$
@BradyGilg True, but although I have some affinity towards mathematics and preciseness, I didn't go the extra mile of talking about the "n-dimensional unit-sphere" or something like a ~"dimensionless measure of volume". It was a good riddle, IMHO (and I spent more time than I'd like to admit reading about things like regular polytopes, symmetries, and honeycombs, while hunting for the answer ;-))
$endgroup$
– Marco13
Oct 2 at 22:18


















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