1986 IMO Problems/Problem 1: Difference between revisions
Lovematch13 (talk | contribs) m →Solution 1: Got rid of informal slang (changed mods to modular arithmetic) |
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As we have covered all possible cases, we are done. | As we have covered all possible cases, we are done. | ||
~Shen kislay kai | |||
===Solution 2=== | ===Solution 2=== | ||
Revision as of 12:10, 3 September 2024
Problem
Let
be any positive integer not equal to
or
. Show that one can find distinct
in the set
such that
is not a perfect square.
Solution
Solution 1
We do casework with modular arithmetic.
is not a perfect square.
is not a perfect square.
Therefore,
Now consider
is not a perfect square.
is not a perfect square.
As we have covered all possible cases, we are done. ~Shen kislay kai
Solution 2
Proof by contradiction:
Suppose
,
and
. From the first equation,
is an odd integer. Let
. We have
, which is an odd integer. Then
and
must be even integers, denoted by
and
respectively, and thus
, from which
can be deduced. Since
is even,
and
have the same parity, so
is divisible by
. It follows that the odd integer
must be divisible by
, leading to a contradiction. We are done.
Alternate solutions are always welcome. If you have a different, elegant solution to this problem, please add it to this page.
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