1989 AIME Problems/Problem 14
Problem
Given a positive integer
, it can be shown that every complex number of the form
, where
and
are integers, can be uniquely expressed in the base
using the integers
as digits. That is, the equation
is true for a unique choice of non-negative integer
and digits
chosen from the set
, with
. We write
to denote the base
expansion of
. There are only finitely many integers
that have four-digit expansions
Find the sum of all such
,
Solution
First, we find the first three powers of
:
So we solve the diophantine equation
.
The minimum the left-hand side can go is -54, so
since
can't equal 0, so we try cases:
- Case 1:

- The only solution to that is
.
- Case 2:

- The only solution to that is
.
So we have four-digit integers
and
, and we need to find the sum of all integers
that can be expressed by one of those.
:
We plug the first three digits into base 10 to get
. The sum of the integers
in that form is
.
:
We plug the first three digits into base 10 to get
. The sum of the integers
in that form is
. The answer is
.
~minor edit by Yiyj1
See also
| 1989 AIME (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
| Preceded by Problem 13 |
Followed by Problem 15 | |
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