Showing posts with label dates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dates. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Mom's babies born on 8/8/08, 9/9/09, 10/10/10



Unlike many moms, Barbara Soper never gets her kids' birthdays confused. That's because her first was born on Aug, 8, 2008, her second on Sept. 9, 2009 and her most recent on Oct. 10, 2010.

Yes, that's 8-8-08, 9-9-09, and 10-10-10.

The Rockford, Mich., mom and husband Chad weren't thinking about dates when their children were born.

Their doctor had to give drugs to start labor for the couple's first daughter, Chloe Corrin Soper, who was born full term on Aug. 8 at Spectrum Health's Butterworth Hospital in Grand Rapids, Mich.

Their son was a surprise all around. "He wasn't a planned baby at all, he was a miracle," says Barbara Soper. He was due on Sept. 20, 2009, but because sister Chloe's birth had caused some hemorrhaging, their doctor, Andrew Van Slooten, suggested he come out a little early so he'd be smaller.

Soper was started on drugs to induce labor on Sept. 8, but it took 24 hours before Cameron Dane Soper made his way into the world, arriving on 9-9-09.

Soper says she and her husband had thought it would be "neat" if their third child was born on 10-10-10 but because her due date wasn't until Nov. 4, it seemed unlikely.

But it ended up being "kind of a mandatory eviction," says Soper. She developed blood clots in her legs and three weeks before her due date doctors told her the baby needed to be delivered.

The induction was begun on 10-9-10, but it wasn't until 6:53 on Sunday night, 10-10-10, that Cearra Nicole Soper arrived. Despite being three weeks early, "she's feeding well," says mom. "She's a trooper."

While the dates might seem "incredibly rare," they're really not. Such a lineup can only happen in the first 12 years of the century and at least 10 months apart, says Shannon McWeeney, a professor of biostatistics at the Oregon Health Sciences University in Portland.

"Given that the first birth occurred in that window, the probability is not as astronomical as you might be compelled to think," she says.In fact, it's not that high a number at all, says Philip Stark, a professor of statistics at the University of California, Berkeley. "The 'chance' you get depends on the assumptions you make," he says. One set of assumptions gives a chance of about 1 in 50 million. More realistic assumptions — including allowing at least 11 months between births — increases it to about 1 in 2,500. Since thousands of women in the United States had kids in 2008, 2009 and 2010, this suddenly seems a little less extraordinary. But humans "like to look for patterns, to make sense of things" he says. For the Sopers, three is simply their lucky number — "we don't have any more planned," says Barbara.

Source

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Number Sequences In Dates



OK so I have something to "vent" about.

All over the Internets I've seen some rendition of the above image, followed by the fact that at that particular time yesterday yada yada yada...

Then there is usually some sort of proclamation that "this won't happen again until 3010." Of course not! Not with those particular numbers. Don't all of these people realize that at 6:07 and 8 seconds on Sept. 10, 2011 it will happen again? Same thing at 7:08 and 9 seconds on Oct. 11, 2012.. and so on!

These types of things happen all the time, but each time it happens people think it's an incredibly rare occurrence (like the coming of Halley's Comet).

This particular example will happen every 366 days, 1 hour, 1 minute, and 1 second.

And there are a lot of others:

What about exactly 6 hours, 6 minutes, and 6 seconds later when it was 8/9/10 11:12:13?

Last year in September, we had 09-09-09, and I'm sure it also included some form of the time of 9:09:09 a.m. that day. This one also happens every 366 days, 1 hour, 1 minute, and 1 second. Hmmm, I think there's a pattern here.

We also had a "binary" day back on 01/01/10, which can be further complicated by specifying that at 8 times 16 times that day (1:00:00, 1:00:01, 1:00:10, 1:00:11, 1:01:00, 1:01:01, 1:01:10, 1:01:11, 1:10:00, 1:10:01, 1:10:10, 1:10:11, 1:11:00, 1:11:01, 1:11:10, and 1:11:11) it is expanded to 12-digit binary (including the 0 which is left out before 1 o'clock times). And what'da'ya' know, only 9 days later the exact same thing happens again. By the way the same 16 32 occurrences happened in 2001, too, and will also happen this coming January - Not to mention that in October we'll have 10/01/10, 10/10/10... you get the picture.

Until the year turns to 2013, there will be lots of these funny sequences of digits when including the month. Likewise until the year turns to 2032, there will be a number of these sequences that include the day of the month.

And I'll bet no one even realized what was going on back on January 2, 2004 at 8:16:32.

/vent

Update: Mistakes corrected