1998 AHSME Problems/Problem 30
Problem
For each positive integer , let
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Let denote the smallest positive integer for which the rightmost nonzero digit of
is odd. The rightmost nonzero digit of
is
Solution
We have .
The value can be written as
, where
is not divisible by 2 and 5. The number of trailing zeroes is
. The last non-zero digit is the last digit of
.
Clearly, the last non-zero digit is even iff iff
.
Thus we are looking for the smallest such that the power of
that divides
is at least equal to the power of
that divides
.
The number is a product of
consecutive integers. Out of these,
are divisible by
. Out of those
, at least
are divisible by
, and out of those
, one is divisible by
. Therefore
for all
.
On the other hand, exactly of our ten integers are divisible by
, and at most one of them can be divisible by a higher power of
. As we need
, one of the integers from
to
must be divisible by
. Therefore
.
We can now take numbers starting with , and write each of them in the form
. We are looking for 10 consecutive rows where the sum of
s is at least equal to the sum of
s.
number x y z 78116 2 0 19529 78117 0 0 78117 78118 1 0 39059 78119: 0 0 78119 78120: 3 1 1953 78121: 0 0 78121 78122: 1 0 39061 78123: 0 0 78123 78124: 2 0 19531 78125: 0 7 1 78126: 1 0 39063
At this point we can stop, as we just found out that is of the form
. Therefore the
we seek is
.
Now all we need to do is to compute the last non-zero digit. As the powers of and
that divide
are equal, the last non-zero digit is simply the product of the last digits of the ten
s. This is
.
See also
1998 AHSME (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 29 |
Followed by Last Question | |
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