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Well done Carol in Leeds and others. This really is right at the top end of Stage 4 material and takes some following. Most people would need to go over the argument below several times, probably taking breaks and coming back again. There are quite a lot of numbers to keep track of so stay patient with yourself and here goes :
When a number is reduced or increased by a factor of ten the square of that number is reduced or increased by a factor of one hundred.
$4000$ reduces by a factor of one hundred to become $40$ so a factor of ten will connect their square roots.
So if I knew what the square root of $4000$ was, the square root of $40$ would be the same but with the digits all one position lower (to the right). Now to work.
This method is about deciding, one by one, what each digit is.
The square root of $40$ starts with a six and then becomes decimal, so the square root of $4000$ starts with sixty-something, before becoming decimal.
And it's that 'something' digit which I need to find.
I want the whole number whose square is as close as possible to $4000$.This corresponds to the third stage of working in the method. And the answer is two. $1262 \times2$ is $2524$
Now for something important : I notice that although $3100$ is the number in the working, this method for finding a square root doesn't do $400000 - 630^2$ directly to get it.Keep constructing triangles in the incircle of the previous triangle. What happens?
Vedic Sutra is one of many ancient Indian sutras which involves a cross subtraction method. Can you give a good explanation of WHY it works?
Scheduling games is a little more challenging than one might desire. Here are some tournament formats that sport schedulers use.