Magic Square
Magic Square
Magic Square
Magic square
In recreational mathematics, a magic square of order n is an arrangement of n2 numbers, usually distinct integers, in a square, such that the n numbers in all rows, all columns, and both diagonals sum to the same constant.[1] A normal magic square contains the integers from 1 to n2. The term "magic square" is also sometimes used to refer to any of various types of word square. Normal magic squares exist for all orders n 1 except n = 2, although the case n = 1 is trivial, consisting of a single cell containing the number 1. The smallest nontrivial case, shown below, is of order 3.
The constant sum in every row, column and diagonal is called the magic constant or magic sum, M. The magic constant of a normal magic square depends only on n and has the value
For normal magic squares of order n = 3, 4,5, ..., the magic constants are: 15, 34, 65, 111, 175, 260, ... (sequence A006003 in OEIS).
History
Magic squares were known to Chinese mathematicians, as early as 650 BCE[2] and Arab mathematicians, possibly as early as the 7th century, when the Arabs conquered northwestern parts of the Indian subcontinent and learned Indian mathematics and astronomy, including other aspects of combinatorial mathematics. The first magic squares of order 5 and 6 appear in an encyclopedia from Baghdad circa 983 CE, the Encyclopedia of the Brethren of Purity (Rasa'il Ihkwan al-Safa); simpler magic squares were known to several earlier Arab mathematicians.[2] Some of these squares were later used in conjunction with magic letters as in (Shams Al-ma'arif) to assist Arab illusionists and magicians.[3]
Iron plate with an order 6 magic square in Arabic numbers from China, dating to the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368).
Chinese literature dating from as early as 650 BC tells the legend of Lo Shu or "scroll of the river Lo".[2] In ancient China there was a huge flood. The great king Yu () tried to channel the water out to sea where then emerged from the water a turtle with a curious figure/pattern on its shell; circular dots of numbers which were arranged in a three by three grid pattern such that the sum of the numbers in each row, column and diagonal was the same: 15, which is also the number of days in each of the 24 cycles of the Chinese solar year. This pattern, in a certain way, was used by the people in controlling the river.
Magic square
4 9 2 3 5 7 8 1 6
The Lo Shu Square, as the magic square on the turtle shell is called, is the unique normal magic square of order three in which 1 is at the bottom and 2 is in the upper right corner. Every normal magic square of order three is obtained from the Lo Shu by rotation or reflection. The Square of Lo Shu is also referred to as the Magic Square of Saturn.
Persia
Although a definitive judgement of early history of magic squares is not available, it has been suggested that magic squares are probably of pre-Islamic Persian origin.[4] The study of magic squares in medieval Islam in Persia is however common, and supposedly, came after the introduction of Chess in Persia.[5] For instance in the 10th century, the Persian mathematician Buzjani has left a manuscript on page 33 of which there is a series of magic squares, which are filled by numbers in arithmetic progression in such a way that the sums on each line, column and diagonal are equal.[6]
Arabia
Magic squares were known to Islamic mathematicians, possibly as early as the 7th century, when the Arabs came into contact with Indian culture, and learned Indian mathematics and astronomy, including other aspects of combinatorial mathematics. It has also been suggested that the idea came via China. The first magic squares of order 5 and 6 appear in an encyclopedia from Baghdad circa 983 AD, the Rasa'il Ikhwan al-Safa (the Encyclopedia of the Brethren of Purity); simpler magic squares were known to several earlier Arab mathematicians.[2] The Arab mathematician Ahmad al-Buni, who worked on magic squares around 1250 A.D., attributed mystical properties to them, although no details of these supposed properties are known. There are also references to the use of magic squares in astrological calculations, a practice that seems to have originated with the Arabs.[2]
India
The 3x3 magic square was used as part of rituals in India from vedic times, and continues to be used to this day. The Ganesh yantra is a 3x3 magic square. A well known early 4x4 magic square in India can be seen in Khajuraho in the Parshvanath Jain temple. It dates from the 10th century.[7]
7 2 16 9 12 13 3 6 1 8 10 15 14 11 5 4
This is referred to as the Chautisa Yantra, since each row, column, diagonal, 2x2 sub-square, the corners of each 3x3 and 4x4 square, the two sets of four symmetrical numbers (1+11+16+6 and 2+12+15+5), and the sum of the middle two entries of the two outer columns and rows (12+1+6+15 and 2+16+11+5), sums to 34. In this square, every second diagonal number adds to 17. Apart from squares, 8 trapeziums (2 in one direction) and the others at a rotation of 90 degrees, such as (12, 1, 16, 5) and (13, 8, 9, 4). Apart from trapeziums, 4 triangles are also present, where 3 numbers connect to a corner, such as the numbers 2, 3, 15 connect to 14 form a triangle. This triangle can also be rotated by 90 degrees.
Magic square The Kubera-Kolam is a floor painting used in India which is in the form of a magic square of order three. It is essentially the same as the Lo Shu Square, but with 19 added to each number, giving a magic constant of 72.
23 28 21 22 24 26 27 20 25
Europe
In 1300, building on the work of the Arab Al-Buni, Greek Byzantine scholar Manuel Moschopoulos wrote a mathematical treatise on the subject of magic squares, leaving out the mysticism of his predecessors.[8] Moschopoulos was essentially unknown to the Latin west. He was not, either, the first Westerner to have written on magic squares. They appear in a spanish manuscript written in the 1280s, presently in the Biblioteca Vaticana (cod. Reg. Lat. 1283a) due to Alfonso X of Castille.[9] In that text, each magic square is assigned to the respective planet, as in the Islamic literature.[10] Magic squares surface again in Italy in the 14th century, and specifically in Florence. In fact, a 6x6 and a 9x9 square are exhibited in a manuscript of the Trattato d'Abbaco (Treatise of the Abacus) by Paolo dell'Abbaco, aka Paolo Dagomari, a mathematician, astronomer and astrologer who was, among other things, in close contact with Jacopo Alighieri, a son of Dante. The squares can be seen on folios 20 and 21 of MS. 2433, at the Biblioteca Universitaria of Bologna. They also appear on folio 69rv of Plimpton 167, a manuscript copy of the Trattato This page from Athanasius Kircher's Oedipus Aegyptiacus (1653) belongs to a treatise on magic squares and shows dell'Abbaco from the 15th century in the Library of Columbia [11] the Sigillum Iovis associated with Jupiter University. It is interesting to observe that Paolo Dagomari, like Pacioli after him, refers to the squares as a useful basis for inventing mathematical questions and games, and does not mention any magical use. Incidentally, though, he also refers to them as being respectively the Sun's and the Moon's squares, and mentions that they enter astrological calculations that are not better specified. As said, the same point of view seems to motivate the fellow Florentine Luca Pacioli, who describes 3x3 to 9x9 squares in his work De Viribus Quantitatis.[12] Pacioli states: A lastronomia summamente hanno mostrato li supremi di quella commo Ptolomeo, al bumasar ali, al fragano, Geber et gli altri tutti La forza et virtu de numeri eserli necessaria (The supreme masters of Astronomy, such as Ptolemy, Albumasar, Alfraganus, Jabir and all the others, have shown that the force and the virtue of numbers are necessary to that science) and then goes on to describe the seven planetary squares, with no mention of magical applications. Magic squares of order 3 through 9, assigned to the seven planets, and described as means to attract the influence of planets and their angels (or demons) during magical practices, can be found in several manuscripts all around Europe starting at least since the 15th century. Among the best known, the Liber de Angelis, a magical handbook written around 1440, is included in Cambridge Univ. Lib. MS Dd.xi.45.[13] The text of the Liber de Angelis is very close to that of De septem quadraturis planetarum seu quadrati magici, another handbook of planetary image magic contained in the Codex 793 of the Biblioteka Jagielloska (Ms BJ 793).[14] The magical operations involve engraving the appropriate square on a plate made with the metal assigned to the corresponding planet,[15] as well as
Magic square performing a variety of rituals. For instance, the 3x3 square, that belongs to Saturn, has to be inscribed on a lead plate. It will, in particular, help women during a difficult childbirth. In 1514 Albrecht Drer immortalizes a 4x4 square in his famous engraving "Melancholia I". In about 1510 Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa wrote De Occulta Philosophia, drawing on the Hermetic and magical works of Marsilio Ficino and Pico della Mirandola. In its 1531 edition, he expounded on the magical virtues of the seven magical squares of orders 3 to 9, each associated with one of the astrological planets, much in the same way as the older texts did. This book was very influential throughout Europe until the counter-reformation, and Agrippa's magic squares, sometimes called Kameas, continue to be used within modern ceremonial magic in much the same way as he first prescribed.[2][16]
11 27 28
12 25 5
19 14 16 15 23 24 18 20 22 21 17 13 25 29 10 36 5 33 9 4 26 12 2 31
13 21 1 19
11 10 2 3
10 18 23 6
14 22 2 15
Venus=175 22 47 16 41 10 35 5 30 4
23 48 17 42 11 29 6 24 49 18 36 12 7 25 43 19 37 1 33 9 26 44 20 2 34 27 45 3 28
13 31
38 14 32 21 39 8
46 15 40
Mercury=260 8 58 59 5 4 62 63 1
49 15 14 52 53 11 10 56 41 23 22 44 45 19 18 48 32 34 35 29 28 38 39 25 40 26 27 37 36 30 31 33 17 47 46 20 21 43 42 24 9 64 55 54 12 13 51 50 16 2 3 61 60 6 7 57
Magic square
Luna=369 37 78 29 70 21 62 13 54 6 47 5
38 79 30 71 22 63 14 46 7 39 80 31 72 23 55 15 8 40 81 32 64 24 56 9 41 73 33 65 25 1 42 74 34 66 2 43 75 35 3 44 76 4 45
16 48
57 17 49
26 58 18 50
67 27 59 10 51
36 68 19 60 11 52
77 28 69 20 61 12 53
The most common use for these Kameas is to provide a pattern upon which to construct the sigils of spirits, angels or demons; the letters of the entity's name are converted into numbers, and lines are traced through the pattern that these successive numbers make on the kamea. In a magical context, the term magic square is also applied to a variety of word squares or number squares found in magical grimoires, including some that do not follow any obvious pattern, and even those The derivation of the sigil of Hagiel, the with differing numbers of rows and columns. They are generally planetary intelligence of Venus, drawn on the intended for use as talismans. For instance the following squares are: magic square of Venus. Each Hebrew letter The Sator square, one of the most famous magic squares found in a provides a numerical value, giving the vertices of number of grimoires including the Key of Solomon; a square "to the sigil. [17] overcome envy", from The Book of Power; and two squares from The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage, the first to cause the illusion of a superb palace to appear, and the second to be worn on the head of a child during an angelic invocation:
H E S E B E Q A L S E B G A D A M D A R A A R A D M A D A
Magic square
10 11 6 7
15 14
Drer's magic square can also be extended to a magic cube.[19] Drer's magic square and his Melencolia I both also played large roles in Dan Brown's 2009 novel, The Lost Symbol.
Magic square
1 11 8 13
14 14 7 6
4 9 5 15
10 10 2 3
While having the same pattern of summation, this is not a normal magic square as above, as two numbers (10 and 14) are duplicated and two (12 and 16) are absent, failing the 1n2 rule. Similarly to Drer's magic square, the Sagrada Familia's magic square can also be extended to a magic cube.[20]
Magic square
step 1 1 -
step 2 1 2
step 3 1 3 2
step 4 1 3 4 2
step 5 1 3 5 4 2
step 6 1 6 3 5 4 2
step 7 1 6 3 5 7 4 2
step 8 8 1 6 3 5 7 4 2
step 9 8 1 6 3 5 7 4 9 2
Starting from other squares rather than the central column of the first row is possible, but then only the row and column sums will be identical and result in a magic sum, whereas the diagonal sums will differ. The result will thus be a semimagic square and not a true magic square. Moving in directions other than north east can also result in magic squares.
11 22 33 44 46
10 21 32 43 54 56
18 20 31 42 53 55 66
17 19 30 41 52 63 65 76 5 15
14 16
16 27 29 40 51 62 64 75 26 28 39 50 61 72 74 36 38 49 60 71 73 37 48 59 70 81 2 3 4
13 20 22 3 9
10 12 19 21 11 18 25 2
14 25
13 24 35
Example:
Magic square
The "Middle Number" is always in the diagonal bottom left to top right. The "Last Number" is always opposite the number 1 in an outside column or row.
M = Order 4 1 6 7 4
M = Order 4 1 12 8 15 14 6 7 4 9 5 16
10 11 13 16
10 11 3 2
13
An extension of the above example for Orders 8 and 12 First generate a "truth" table, where a '1' indicates selecting from the square where the numbers are written in order 1 to n2 (left-to-right, top-to-bottom), and a '0' indicates selecting from the square where the numbers are written in reverse order n2 to 1. For M = 4, the "truth" table is as shown below, (third matrix from left.)
M = Order 4 1 5 9 2 6 3 7 4 8
M = Order 4 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 8 4 7 3 6 2 9 5 1
M = Order 4 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1
M = Order 4 1 12 8 13 15 14 6 7 4 9 5 16
10 11 12
10 11 3 2
13 14 15 16
Note that a) there are equal number of '1's and '0's; b) each row and each column are "palindromic"; c) the left- and right-halves are mirror images; and d) the top- and bottom-halves are mirror images (c & d imply b.) The truth table can be denoted as (9, 6, 6, 9) for simplicity (1-nibble per row, 4 rows.) Similarly, for M=8, two choices for the truth table are (A5, 5A, A5, 5A, 5A, A5, 5A, A5) or (99, 66, 66, 99, 99, 66, 66, 99) (2-nibbles per row, 8 rows.) For M=12, the truth table (E07, E07, E07, 1F8, 1F8, 1F8, 1F8, 1F8, 1F8, E07, E07, E07) yields a magic square (3-nibbles per row, 12 rows.) It is possible to count the number of choices one has based on the truth table, taking rotational symmetries into account.
Magic square
10
Medjig 3 x 3 2 3 0 2 0 2 1 0 3 1 3 1 Order 3 8 1 6 3 5 7 4 9 2 3 1 1 2 2 0 0 2 0 3 3 1 3 2 2 0 0 2 0 1 3 1 1 3 26 35 17 8
Order 6 1 19 6 24
28 10 33 15 7
30 12 14 23 25 3 21 5
32 34 16 9 2 20
31 22 27 4
13 36 18 11 29
Similarly, for any larger integer N, a magic square of order 2N can be constructed from any N x N medjig-square with each row, column, and long diagonal summing to 3N, and any N x N magic square (using the four numbers from 1 to 4N^2 that equal the original number modulo N^2).
Magic square
11
59 54 12 21 43 38 28 3 61 36 30 19 45 6 27 37 44 22
52 14
11 53 60 64 7 2
15 49 48 18 31 33
57 56 10 23 41 40 26 1 63 34 32 17 47 8 25 39 42 24
50 16 9
55 58
Order 12, sum 870 138 19 128 5 136 21 130 3 134 23 132 1 8 17 127 114 6 43 32 41 103 90 56 65 79 30 67 77 92 54
125 140 18 7
101 116 42 31
137 104 20 29
113 80 66 55 89 44 53 91 78 68
139 126 10 15
129 112 4 45
105 88 58 63 81 28 69 75 94 52
123 142 16 9
135 106 22 27
111 82 64 57 87 46 51 93 76 70
141 124 12 13
131 110 2 47
107 86 60 61 83 26 71 73 96 50
121 144 14 11
133 108 24 25
109 84 62 59 85 48 49 95 74 72
143 122
Order 12, sum 870 1 142 11 136 8 138 5 139 12 135 2 141 120 121 27 22 48 99 38 85 72 73 60 58 75 70 87 97 46 24 25 144 3 134 9 137 7 140 6 133 10 143 4
123 118 14 35
110 131 33 16
95 62 83 50 107 40
105 52 81 64 93 41
129 112 17 32
113 128 31 18
92 65 80 53 104 42
103 54 79 66 91 44
127 114 20 29
116 125 30 19
89 68 77 56 101 43
102 55 78 67 90 37
126 115 13 36
109 132 34 15
96 61 84 49 108 39 98 45
106 51 82 63 94 47 86 71 74 59
130 111 23 26
119 122 28 21
100 57 76 69 88
124 117
The order 8 square satisfies all panmagic properties, including the Franklin ones. It consists of 4 perfectly panmagic 4x4 units. Note that both order 12 squares show the property that any row or column can be divided in three parts
Magic square having a sum of 290 (= 1/3 of the total sum of a row or column). This property compensates the absence of the more standard panmagic Franklin property that any 1/2 row or column shows the sum of 1/2 of the total. For the rest the order 12 squares differ a lot.The Barink 12x12 square is composed of 9 perfectly panmagic 4x4 units, moreover any 4 consecutive numbers starting on any odd place in a row or column show a sum of 290. The Morris 12x12 square lacks these properties, but on the contrary shows constant Franklin diagonals. For a better understanding of the constructing decompose the squares as described above, and see how it was done. And note the difference between the Barink constructions on the one hand, and the Morris/Franklin construction on the other hand. In the book Mathematics in the Time-Life Science Library Series, magic squares by Euler and Franklin are shown. Franklin designed this one so that any four-square subset (any four contiguous squares that form a larger square, or any four squares equidistant from the center) total 130. In Euler's square, the rows and columns each total 260, and halfway they total 130and a chess knight, making its L-shaped moves on the square, can touch all 64 boxes in consecutive numerical order.
12
Generalizations
Extra constraints
Certain extra restrictions can be imposed on magic squares. If not only the main diagonals but also the broken diagonals sum to the magic constant, the result is a panmagic square. If raising each number to certain powers yields another magic square, the result is a bimagic, a trimagic, or, in general, a multimagic square.
Different constraints
Sometimes the rules for magic squares are relaxed, so that only the rows and columns but not necessarily the diagonals sum to the magic constant (this is usually called a semimagic square). In heterosquares and antimagic squares, the 2n+2 sums must all be different.
Magic square
13
M = 6720 M = 216 2 9 12 1 1 6 20 56 2 24 7 3 4 10
40 28 14 12 5 8
36 6 3
4 18
Ali Skalli's non iterative method of construction is also applicable to multiplicative magic squares. On the 7x7 example below, the products of each line, each column and each diagonal is 6,227,020,800.
Skalli multiplicative 7 x 7 27 50 66 84 13 24 52 56 9 3 2 32
40 54 70 11 6
20 44 36 65 1
55 72 91 4
16 36 30
24 45 60 77 12 26 5 48 63
10 22 48 39 78 7 8
18 40 33 60
Magic square
14
Skalli multiplicative 7 x 7 of complex numbers 21+14i 6335i 3115i 70+30i 28+114i 1313i 939i 14i 105217i 2+6i 16+50i 311i 4949i 5+9i 414i 148i
Combined extensions
One can combine two or more of the above extensions, resulting in such objects as multiplicative multimagic hypercubes. Little seems to be known about this subject.
Related problems
Over the years, many mathematicians, including Euler, Cayley and Benjamin Franklin have worked on magic squares, and discovered fascinating relations.
Magic square
15
17
89
71 5
113 59 47
29 101
The GreenTao theorem implies that there are arbitrarily large magic squares consisting of primes. Using Ali Skalli's non-iterative method of magic squares construction, it is easy to create magic squares of primes[28] of any dimension. In the example below, many symmetries appear (including all sorts of crosses), as well as the horizontal and vertical translations of all those. The magic constant is 13665.
Skalli Primes 5 x 5 2087 2633 2803 2753 3389 2843 2729 3347 2099 2647 3359 2113 2687 2819 2687 2663 2777 2699 3373 2153 2713 3413 2129 2621 2789
It is believed that an infinite number of Skalli's magic squares of prime exist, but no demonstration exists to date. However, it is possible to easily produce a considerable number of them, not calculable in the absence of demonstration.
n-Queens problem
In 1992, Demirrs, Rafraf, and Tanik published a method for converting some magic squares into n-queens solutions, and vice versa.[29]
Notes
[1] " Magic Square (http:/ / demonstrations. wolfram. com/ MagicSquare/ )" by Onkar Singh, Wolfram Demonstrations Project. [2] Swaney, Mark. (http:/ / web. archive. org/ web/ 20040807015853/ http:/ / www. netmastersinc. com/ secrets/ magic_squares. htm). [3] The most famous Arabic book in magics, named "Shams Al-ma'arif (Arabic: ,) for Ahmed bin Ali Al-boni who died about 1225 (622 AH).reprinted in Beirut in 1985 [4] J. P. Hogendijk, A. I. Sabra, The Enterprise of Science in Islam: New Perspectives, Published by MIT Press, 2003, ISBN 0-262-19482-1, p. xv. [5] Helaine Selin, Ubiratan D'Ambrosio, Mathematics Across Cultures: The History of Non-western Mathematics, Published by Springer, 2001, ISBN 140200260, p. 160. [6] Sesiano, J., Abal-Waf\rasp's treatise on magic squares (french), Z. Gesch. Arab.-Islam. Wiss. 12 (1998), 121--244. [7] Magic Squares and Cubes By William Symes Andrews, 1908, Open court publish company [8] Manuel Moschopoulos - Mathematics and the Liberal Arts (http:/ / mtcs. truman. edu/ ~thammond/ history/ ManuelMoschopoulos. html) [9] See Alfonso X el Sabio, Astromagia (Ms. Reg. lat. 1283a), a cura di A.D'Agostino, Napoli, Liguori, 1992 [10] Mars magic square appears in figure 1 of "Saturn and Melancholy: Studies in the History of Natural Philosophy, Religion, and Art" by Raymond Klibansky, Erwin Panofsky and Fritz Saxl, Basic Books (1964) [11] In a 1981 article ("Zur Frhgeschichte der magischen Quadrate in Westeuropa" i.e. "Prehistory of Magic Squares in Western Europe", Sudhoffs Archiv Kiel (1981) vol. 65, pp. 313-338) German scholar Menso Folkerts lists several manuscripts in which the "Trattato d'Abbaco" by Dagomari contains the two magic square. Folkerts quotes a 1923 article by Amedeo Agostini in the Bollettino dell'Unione Matematica Italiana: "A. Agostini in der Handschrift Bologna, Biblioteca Universitaria, Ms. 2433, f. 20v-21r; siehe Bollettino della Unione Matematica Italiana 2 (1923), 77f. Agostini bemerkte nicht, dass die Quadrate zur Abhandlung des Paolo dellAbbaco gehren und auch in anderen Handschriften dieses Werks vorkommen, z. B. New York, Columbia University, Plimpton 167, f. 69rv; Paris, BN, ital. 946, f. 37v-38r; Florenz, Bibl. Naz., II. IX. 57, f. 86r, und Targioni 9, f. 77r; Florenz, Bibl. Riccard., Ms. 1169, f. 94-95." [12] This manuscript text (circa 1496-1508) is also at the Biblioteca Universitaria in Bologna. It can be seen in full at the address http:/ / www. uriland. it/ matematica/ DeViribus/ Presentazione. html [13] See Juris Lidaka, The Book of Angels, Rings, Characters and Images of the Planets in Conjuring Spirits, C. Fangier ed. (Pennsylvania State University Press, 1994)
Magic square
[14] Benedek Lng, Demons in Krakow, and Image Magic in a Magical Handbook, in Christian Demonology and Popular Mythology, Gbor Klaniczay and va Pcs eds. (Central European University Press, 2006) [15] According to the correspondence principle, each of the seven planets is associated to a given metal: lead to Saturn, iron to Mars, gold to the Sun, etc. [16] Drury, Nevill (1992). Dictionary of Mysticism and the Esoteric Traditions. Bridport, Dorset: Prism Press. ISBN1-85327-075-X. [17] "The Book of Power: Cabbalistic Secrets of Master Aptolcater, Mage of Adrianople", transl. 1724. In Shah, Idries (1957). The Secret Lore of Magic. London: Frederick Muller Ltd. [18] http:/ / www. muljadi. org/ MagicSquares. htm [19] " Magic cube with Drer's square (http:/ / sites. google. com/ site/ aliskalligvaen/ home-page/ -magic-cube-with-duerer-s-square)" Ali Skalli's magic squares and magic cubes [20] " Magic cube with Gaudi's square (http:/ / sites. google. com/ site/ aliskalligvaen/ home-page/ -magic-cube-with-gaudi-s-square)" Ali Skalli's magic squares and magic cubes [21] http:/ / www. gaspalou. fr/ magic-squares/ index. htm [22] Mathematical Circles Squared" By Phillip E. Johnson, Howard Whitley Eves, p.22 [23] Hartley, M. "Making Big Magic Squares" (http:/ / www. dr-mikes-math-games-for-kids. com/ making-big-magic-squares. html). [24] Evolving a Magic Square using Genetic Algorithms (http:/ / www. dcs. napier. ac. uk/ ~benp/ summerschool/ jdemos/ herdy/ magic_problem2. html) [25] " 8x8 multiplicative magic square of complex numbers (http:/ / sites. google. com/ site/ aliskalligvaen/ home-page/ -multiplicative-of-complex-numbers-8x8)" Ali Skalli's magic squares and magic cubes [26] Magic Designs,Robert B. Ely III, Journal of Recreational Mathematics volume 1 number 1, January 1968 [27] Magic squares are given a whole new dimension (http:/ / www. guardian. co. uk/ science/ 2011/ apr/ 03/ magic-squares-geomagic-lee-sallows), The Observer, April 3, 2011 [28] " magic square of primes (http:/ / sites. google. com/ site/ aliskalligvaen/ home-page/ -5x5-square-of-prime-numbers)" Ali Skalli's magic squares and magic cubes [29] O. Demirrs, N. Rafraf, and M. M. Tanik. Obtaining n-queens solutions from magic squares and constructing magic squares from n-queens solutions. Journal of Recreational Mathematics, 24:272280, 1992
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References
Weisstein, Eric W., " Magic Square (http://mathworld.wolfram.com/MagicSquare.html)" from MathWorld. Magic Squares (http://mathdl.maa.org/convergence/1/?pa=content&sa=viewDocument&nodeId=528& bodyId=784) at Convergence (http://mathdl.maa.org/convergence/1/) W. S. Andrews, Magic Squares and Cubes. (New York: Dover, 1960), originally printed in 1917 John Lee Fults, Magic Squares. (La Salle, Illinois: Open Court, 1974). Cliff Pickover, The Zen of Magic Squares, Circles, and Stars (Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press) Leonhard Euler, On magic squares ( pdf (http://arxiv.org/pdf/math/0408230) ) Mark Farrar, Magic Squares ( (http://www.MagicSquaresBook.com/) ) Asker Ali Abiyev, The Natural Code of Numbered Magic Squares (1996), <http://www1.gantep.edu.tr/~abiyev/abiyeving.htm> William H. Benson (http://cboyer.club.fr/multimagie/English/BensonDickinson.htm) and Oswald Jacoby, "New Recreations with Magic Squares". (New York: Dover, 1976). A 'perfect' magic square (http://www.doermann.com/square/index.html) presented as a magic trick (Online Generator - Magic Square 4x4 using Javascript) Magic Squares of Order 4,5,6, and some theory (http://www.hbmeyer.de/backtrack/mag4en.htm) Evolving a Magic Square using Genetic Algorithms (http://www.dcs.napier.ac.uk/~benp/summerschool/ jdemos/herdy/magic_problem2.html) Magic squares and magic cubes (http://sites.google.com/site/aliskalligvaen/home-page): examples of magic squares and magic cubes built with Ali Skalli's non iterative method
Magic square
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Further reading
Charney, Noah The Art Thief Atria (2007), a novel with a key plot point involving a magic square. McCranie, Judson (November 1988). "Magic Squares of All Orders". Mathematics Teacher: 67478. Semanisinova, Ingrid; Trenkler, Marian (August 2007). "Discovering the Magic of Magic Squares" (http://www. nctm.org/publications/article.aspx?id=19305). Mathematics Teacher 101 (1): 32-39. King, J. R. (1963). Magic Square Numbers. Magic square (http://www.dmoz.org/Science/Math/Recreations/Magic_Square/) at the Open Directory Project
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License
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