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Gemini's Infographic Summary of the Content in this Post |
I recently turned 28077 days old and with my 77th birthday rapidly approaching I wondered if it's possible for a person's birthday to fall in such a way that their age in years matched the last two digits of their diurnal age. I prompted Gemini:
Suppose someone is born on April 3rd 1949. Let's count this as day 0. April 4th 1949 then counts as day 1 and so on. This progressive number we term the person's diurnal age as opposed to their age in years. As the person ages (let's say from 1 to 100) is there a birthday such that the last two digits of their diurnal age equals their age in years. Can you write a program in SageMath to determine this. The program should run in SageMathCell or a Jupyter notework.
The program (permalink) came up with only one age, 14, and an associated diurnal age of 5114 for person's born within a certain date range. For example for persons born in 2012 who are turning 14 this year (2026), only those with birthdates between the 1st January and 28th February will satisfy. Let's check for somebody turning 14 today (16th February 2026) using Wolfram Alpha. See Figure 1.
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Figure 1 |
As can be seen, someone turning 14 years old today will be 5114 days old, satisfying the requirement. I queried Gemini as to whether there might be ages other than 14 that satisfy and this was the response:
Yes, I am sure. Age 14 is the only age in a normal human lifespan (1–100+) where this mathematical coincidence occurs. We can prove this by checking the mathematical constraints for every single age.
The Logic: Why it's only 14
For a match to happen at Age $N$, the following equation must be true: $$(64 \times N) + \text{Leap Days} \quad \text{must be divisible by } 100$$
At Age 14: $64 \times 14 = 896$. The remainder is 96. To reach the next 100, we need 4 more. Can a 14-year-old have lived through 4 leap days? Yes (e.g., born Jan 1948). Result: Match.
At Age 39 (The next closest candidate): $64 \times 39 = 2496$. The remainder is 96. To reach the next 100, we again need 4 more. Can a 39-year-old have lived through only 4 leap days? No. In 39 years, you must experience 9 or 10 leap years. Result: Impossible.
Gemini also explained it earlier in a slightly different way so I'll include that here:
The Math Behind the Age 14 Match
For a match to occur, we need: $$\text{Total Days} \pmod{100} = \text{Age}$$
Let's look at Age 14:
Standard Days: $14 \text{ years} \times 365 \text{ days/year} = 5110 \text{ days}$.
The Remainder: $5110 \pmod{100} = 10$.
The Gap: The remainder is 10, but we need it to equal the age, 14.
The Solution: We need exactly 4 extra days (leap days) to bridge the gap from 10 to 14 ($5110 + 4 = 5114$).
Therefore, any person who experiences exactly 4 leap years by their 14th birthday will have a diurnal age of 5114. Since 5114 ends in 14, this is a perfect match.
Why April 3, 1949 Misses the Match
Let's apply this to your specific date: April 3, 1949.
Period: April 3, 1949 to April 3, 1963.
Leap Years Encountered: 1952, 1956, 1960.
Total Leap Days: 3.
Total Diurnal Age: $5110 + 3 = 5113$.
Result: $5113$ ends in 13. The age is 14. (Missed by 1 day).
Who Gets the Match?
To get 4 leap days in 14 years, you must be born just before a leap day, so that you catch the first one immediately, and then three more over the next 12 years.
This generally happens to people born in January or February of a Leap Year (or late in the year prior to a leap year).


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