Sidereal time The paradox is related to
sidereal time: a
sidereal day is the time Earth takes to rotate for a distant star to return to the same position in the sky, whereas a
solar day is the time for the sun to return to the same position. A year has around 36
5.25 solar days, but 36
6.25 sidereal days to account for one revolution around the sun. As a solar day has 24 hours, a sidereal day has around × 24 hours = 23 hours, 56 minutes and 4.1 seconds.
Group theory A version of the puzzle arises in
group theory, specifically the study of the
Lie group known as the
split real form of G2. One construction of this group uses the fact that a ball rolling around another ball with three times its radius will make four full turns, rather than three.
1982 SAT scoring error In May 1, 1982, one of the US college admissions tests, the
SAT, had a multiple choice question concerning the coin rotation problem. The test had to be regraded after three students—Doug Jungreis, Shivan Kartha, and Bruce Taub—proved there was no correct answer among the choices provided. == See also ==