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Mod 90 Factorization Digital Root Principles

The document discusses how applying the concept of the ancient Vedic Square to the digital root and modulo 90 factorization of certain number sequences exposes beautiful symmetries that determine the distribution of prime numbers greater than 5. Specifically, it shows how a "Vedic Square Light" matrix of digital roots and a sister matrix of modulo 90 values can be used to extrapolate factorization dyads accounting for all composite numbers within the domain. Lastly, it combines these digital root and modulo 90 operations into sets that display the "clockworks" driving factorization.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
211 views6 pages

Mod 90 Factorization Digital Root Principles

The document discusses how applying the concept of the ancient Vedic Square to the digital root and modulo 90 factorization of certain number sequences exposes beautiful symmetries that determine the distribution of prime numbers greater than 5. Specifically, it shows how a "Vedic Square Light" matrix of digital roots and a sister matrix of modulo 90 values can be used to extrapolate factorization dyads accounting for all composite numbers within the domain. Lastly, it combines these digital root and modulo 90 operations into sets that display the "clockworks" driving factorization.

Uploaded by

ibrahim mat
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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From Vedic Square to the Digital Root ‘Clockworks’ of Modulo 90 Factorization

"Vedic Mathematics is...a sophisticated pedagogic and research tool ... ."
– Dr. L.M. Singhvi, former UK High Commissioner for India,
from his forward to Cosmic Calculator, by Williams & Gaskell

Mathematicians from India’s ancient past are credited with inventing the ‘Vedic Square’ (pictured above). As anyone who has
studied Vedic mathematics is aware, this deceptively simple multiplication matrix is a powerful analytical and computational tool.

The numbers in the table’s column and row headings are cross-multiplied, and their products converted to their digital roots,
distributed across 92 cells. [Digital root (aka repeated digit sum, iterated sum-of-digits, or modulus 9 function) refers to the single
digit (1 - 9) that results when all digit sums are summed in turn; this reflects the fact that any natural number is congruent modulo 9
to its digital root. For example: 89 = 8+9 = 17 = 1+7 = 8, or dr(89) = 8.]

When it comes to The Digital Root, we completely agree with the importance attributed to it by Talal Ghannam, Ph.D. (in physics):
“It was through my search for meaning that I discovered how important the digital root space is, which in return rewarded me with a
look at how elegant and beautiful the world really is.” from The Mystery of Numbers Revealed Through Their Digital Root.

In the color-coded matrix below we apply the Vedic Square concept to the period-24 digital root of natural numbers not divisible by
2, 3, or 5─otherwise known as n ≡ {1, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29} modulo 30. We then expand the frame (x 3) to encompass n ≡ {1, 7,
11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 49, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 77, 79, 83, 89} modulo 90. We’ll call this sequence our ‘domain.’
This action synchronizes the modulus with its period-24 digital root, and ─ as we shall discover ─ creates an explosion of symmetries.

By definition, our domain consists of the number 1 and all prime numbers > 5 and their multiplicative multiples. The matrix below
colorfully exposes the perfect symmetry underpinning factorization of our domain at the digital root level. This object expands
geometrically to infinity, and can be configured to spiral within a modulo 90 factorization wheel (ref: primesdemystified.com):
From Vedic Square to the Digital Root ‘Clockworks’ of Modulo 90 Factorization

Given that by definition none of the elements in our defined domain are divisible by 3, you’ll find no 3’s, 6’s, or 9’s in its period-24
digital root sequence, viz. {1, 7, 2, 4, 8, 1, 5, 2, 4, 1, 5, 7, 2, 4, 8, 5, 7, 4, 8, 1, 5, 7, 2, 8} {repeat …}, comprised 4 each of numbers 1, 2,
4, 5, 7, and 8. This knowledge allows us to ‘collapse’ the Vedic Square, as pictured below (and we note that technically the subset {1,
2, 4, 5, 7, 8} forms a cyclic group of multiplicative units in the ring .)

From our ‘Vedic Square Light’ matrix we can then extrapolate the 36 digital root dyads that drive factorization sequencing of
composite numbers within our domain:

Then, again employing the Vedic Square concept, we produce a sister matrix, albeit in her case we’ve converted the cross-multiplied
products to their modulo 90 congruence rather than their digital roots (and note that the principal diagonal (highlighted in blue)
sequences the squares, while the secondary diagonal (highlighted in pink) is comprised exclusively of prime numbers):
From Vedic Square to the Digital Root ‘Clockworks’ of Modulo 90 Factorization

And the beauty of it is that from the matrix pictured above we can extrapolate 24 sets of 24 = 576 modulo 90 factorization dyads
that account for all composite numbers within our domain (and note that each set has perfect bilateral 90-sum symmetry):
From Vedic Square to the Digital Root ‘Clockworks’ of Modulo 90 Factorization

Lastly, we conjoin the 36 digital root operations of modulo 30 factorization with the 24 x 24 modulo 90 multiplication matrix to
expose the beautiful ‘clockworks’ at the heart of factorization. The 576 dyads distribute evenly to 36 sets of 16:
From Vedic Square to the Digital Root ‘Clockworks’ of Modulo 90 Factorization
From Vedic Square to the Digital Root ‘Clockworks’ of Modulo 90 Factorization

These digital root and modulo 90 dyadic patterns expose the profoundly beautiful symmetries and ‘initial conditions’
that ultimately determine the distribution of all prime numbers > 5.

And if you’re asking, “How do you account for the first three primes: 2, 3, and 5?” The simple answer is that they and
their primorial, 30, determine the structure within which factorization algorithms operate. Nor have 3, 6, and 9
disappeared from the scene: They are also present structurally as the digital root of modulo 30, 60, 90 cycles, and
perhaps more profoundly in the form of rotating symmetry groups: equilateral triangles with vertices {1,4,7} and {2,5,8}
that combinatorially rotate the vertices of equilateral triangle {3,6,9}, while the “trinity of triangles” rotate within a 9/3
star polygon in 24 period-24 cycles. 242 = 576.)

Regardless, the beating heart at the center of these patterns is the Vedic Square.

Go figure.

The Guerrilla Arithmetician

primesdemystified.com

This work is licensed by its author, Gary William Croft, under a Creative Commons Attribute Share-Alike 3.0 Unported License.

08.11.2018

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