Difference between revisions of "2018 UNCO Math Contest II Problems/Problem 4"

(Solution 2)
(Solution 2)
 
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~Ultraman
 
~Ultraman
 
== Solution 2 ==
 
There is a similar way to the previous solution. The prime factorization of <math>36,000,000</math> is <math>2^8\cdot3^2\cdot5^6</math>. We need to find the amount of factors of that, so add <math>1 to each exponent and multiply to get </math>(8+1)(2+1)(6+1) = 189<math> factors. Now we need to find the number of factors that are perfect squares. Perfect squares are numbers in the prime factorization with exponents of </math>0, 2, 4, 6, etc. You find the max amount of the exponent that is less than the exponent in the prime factorization. There is a trick to that. You take the exponent in the prime factorization, for example 4. You divide by 2 and add 1 to the result to find the perfect squares in the number and exponent in the prime factorization. You also round up and do not add 1 if your answer is a decimal. You do <math>8/2 + 1</math> to get 5, <math>2/2 + 1 to get 2, and 7/2 and round up to get 4. Multiply those answers to get 5^2^4 to get 40 perfect squares. Subtract it from </math>189 to get <math>149. So there are </math>\boxed{149}$ positive integer factors that are not perfect squares.
 
 
~Aarushgoradia18
 
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==

Latest revision as of 13:34, 2 June 2023

Problem

How many positive integer factors of $36,000,000$ are not perfect squares?

Solution

We can use complementary counting. Taking the prime factorization of $36,000,000$, we get $2^8\cdot3^2\cdot5^6$.So the total number of factors of $36,000,000$ is $(8+1)(2+1)(6+1) = 189$ factors. Now we need to find the number of factors that are perfect squares. So back to the prime factorization, $2^8\cdot3^2\cdot5^6 = 4^4\cdot9^1\cdot5^3$. Now we get $(4+1)(1+1)(3+1)=40$ factors that are perfect squares. So there are $189-40=\boxed{149}$ positive integer factors that are not perfect squares.

~Ultraman

See also

2018 UNCO Math Contest II (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 3
Followed by
Problem 5
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
All UNCO Math Contest Problems and Solutions