Inan’s website chronicles 500 years’ worth of palindromes, from the 19th century to the 23rd. He’s been waiting for this Sunday since at least Nov. 2, 2011, he said, which was an eight-digit palindrome, too (11/02/2011). Of the palindromic dates, Feb. 2, 2020, he said, is extra special.

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“In this century, in the American date system — which is month, day, year — there are 12 eight-digit palindrome dates,” Inan said. But “in this century there is only one such palindrome date which is expressed with eight digits, where you have the complete year number on the right” and the month and day can be swapped. (Put another way: Written as MM/DD/YEAR or DD/MM/YEAR, it’s still a palindrome. Contrast that with 11/02/2011, which in many foreign notations was written as 02/11/2011.)

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That makes Sunday’s palindrome unusually cross-cultural. It’s written as a palindrome “whether you’re in Europe, Asia, America — it happens on the same calendar day, which is February the 2nd,” Inan said. Sunday is also the 33rd day of the year, which is followed by 333 more days, he said.

The previous eight-digit palindrome like this was 11/11/1111, 909 years ago. We’ll only have to wait another 101 years for 12/12/2121, but the next one after that comes on March 3, 3030.

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“When I share these with my students, with other people and whatnot, most of the time I get a spark in other people’s eyes, you know?” Inan said. A palindrome has “this magic power,” Inan said. “And also — it is a brainteaser.”

In case you doubt him, the professor offers a little bit of homework: During the big game’s commercial breaks, or in between bites of chicken wings, try to write down all the palindromes for the 21st century in the American calendar. There are 12 eight-digit palindromes and 26 seven-digit palindromes (in which you drop the zero before a single-digit month). If you get stumped, Inan has the answers on his website.