Openai/694fa129-5c4c-800e-b887-30cd25632750


This conversation was exported from ChatGPT[1]

gpt-5-t-mini edit

User: Bob is thinking of 3 distinct primes. edit

Bob is thinking of 3 distinct primes. Their sum is less than 30 and their concatenation is a palindrome. He asks Jane what his primes are. Jane suggests: 3,11,13-- a triplet whose sum is 27. Bob rejects her answer. Bob's response is justified. Without using arithmetic, what's the most likely explanation for this situation?

Assistant: Write the three primes as digit-strings A,B,CA,B,CA,B,C and look at the string ABCABCABC. edit

Write the three primes as digit-strings A,B,CA,B,CA,B,C and look at the string ABCABCABC. If that string is a palindrome, reading it backwards gives

reverse(C) reverse(B) reverse(A)=A B C.\text{reverse}(C)\,\text{reverse}(B)\,\text{reverse}(A)=A\,B\,C.reverse(C)reverse(B)reverse(A)=ABC. For that equality to hold the middle block must read the same forwards and backwards, so BBB itself is a palindromic prime. (Otherwise the reversed middle block would put different digits into the centre of the whole string.)

So BBB must be a palindromic prime (the only two-digit palindromic prime is 11; single-digit primes are palindromes too). The outer blocks must be digit-reverses of one another (their digits mirror around the centre). That means you cannot have one outer prime be single-digit and the other two-digit (a two-digit number’s reverse is two-digit), so the obvious choice for distinct outer primes is a pair like 13 and 31.

Jane’s proposal 3,11,133,11,133,11,13 violates that forced digit-structure: a single digit 3 cannot be the digit-reverse of the two-digit 13, so it cannot be the correct triple arising from the palindrome condition Bob stated. Hence Bob is justified in rejecting her guess.

References edit

  1. "Palindromic Prime Triplet". ChatGPT. Retrieved 2025-12-28.