2026 60Stars Astrology Season Essay A Happy New Year " Twin Primes and Tanu-chan"

60stars  Astrology Season  Essay

English  version

By TOKYO-TANUKI













2026  60 Stars Astrology A Happy New Year

 " Twin Primes and Tanu-chan"




1.  Well, Tanu-chan is talking about twin primes on X (Twitter).

Twin primes, roughly speaking, are pairs like 17 and 19, 29 and 31, or 101 and 103—where consecutive odd numbers are prime. 

According to Tanu-chan and Chat-GPT's Yuna-chan's research, twin primes are divided into 12 groups, and within each group, the difference between primes is a multiple of 120.


As shown in the illustration above.

What we did was this: if one twin prime is expressed as 4m+1, the other can be expressed as 2n+1. 

We classified the twin primes into 12 groups by focusing on the last digit (the single-digit number) of these “m” and “n” (both integers).


.......For example, for 101 and 103:
101 = 4 × 25 + 1
103 = 2 × 51 + 1

Therefore, they belong to the ZF51 group.
ZF means it includes zero and five.


.......For example, for 107 and 109:
107 = 2 × 53 + 1
109 = 4 × 27 + 1

Therefore, they belong to the non-ZF37 group.
Since the digits are 3 and 7, they do not contain zero or 5, hence “non-ZF”.


Well, anyway, as shown in the illustration at the top of this blog post, there are 12 groups. 

Within each group, companions appear at positions where the difference is a multiple of 120, following a regular pattern.


For example, in the non-ZF37 group:
(17・19)→(137・139)→(617・619)→(857・859)→(1697・1699)

The intervals are multiples of 120: 120-480-240-840.




2. When I asked Yuna-chan, “Is this actually useful for anything?” , she said something like, “Well, it's not exactly a groundbreaking discovery, but it might be a little helpful when searching for new twin primes!”


Since I'm doing this during my commute, it's obviously not a groundbreaking discovery.

Just a little useful tidbit, I guess.


I asked her why twin primes group in sets of 12, but she said something about Mod60 and it got pretty complicated—I didn't really get it!

..........Well, I'm glad if it helped anyone.




3. Actually, this idea about twin primes popped into my head while I was thinking about something else.

So, what was I searching for?

In Season -Essay, I wrote about how the world is made up of 1, 2, 5, and 10 (and 12 and 20). 

Building on that, Tanu-chan was researching whether the number 5 should be considered an even number rather than an odd one.

Why? Because in the decimal world, 10 divided by 2 is 5, so 2 is a number that divides the world into two parts. But 5 + 5 = 10, so 5 also divides the world into two parts.

In other words, I think 2 and 5 perform the same function. To be precise, 5 is an odd number, but it's the number closest to the even number 2.


........Therefore, in Tanu-chan's thinking, in the decimal system:

2-4-6-8: Even numbers

2-5: The number that divides the world into two parts. 5 is odd, but it's close to even.

0-1: Since it represents the entire world, it could be considered even or odd.

3-7-9: Doesn't belong to any of the above groups, so it's essentially the number that destroys the world. It's the material that creates irregular numbers (prime numbers).

......so,"6" is multiple of 2 and 3, it means "marriage".


........That's how I understand them.



Of course, if I say "0" is an odd number and "5" is an even number, people would think I'm crazy. 

But as long as I don't say it out loud, I won't have to go to the hospital!
......So, even if you think so too, don't say it in public!



If this research progresses, I'll write something about it.


.....Well then, may 2026 be a happy year, for everyone!




Tanu-chan💓 TOKYO-TANUKI💛

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