1999 AHSME Problems/Problem 25
Problem
There are unique integers
such that
where
for
. Find
.
Solution 1(Modular Functions)
Multiply out the
to get
By Wilson's Theorem (or by straightforward division),
, so
. Then we move
to the left and divide through by
to obtain
We then repeat this procedure
, from which it follows that
, and so forth. Continuing, we find the unique solution to be
(uniqueness is assured by the Division Theorem). The answer is
.
Solution 2(Basic Algebra and Bashing)
We start by multiplying both sides by
, and we get:
After doing some guess and check, we find that the answer is
.
~aopspandy
Solution 3 (The Easiest and Most Intuitive)
Let's clear up the fractions:
Notice that if we divide everything by
then we would have:
Since
and
must be an integer, then we have
, so
.
Similarly, if we divide everything by
, then we would have:
Again, since
and
must be an integer, we have
, so
.
The pattern repeats itself, so in the end we have
,
,
,
,
,
. So
~BurpSuite, with a help from ostriches88
Solution 4
By multiplying both sides by
we get
since
, if
the rest of the right hand side will not add up to be
, so
If
,
, so
If
,
, so
If
,
, so
. Since
,
and
Therefore,
.
See also
| 1999 AHSME (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
| Preceded by Problem 24 |
Followed by Problem 26 | |
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