Difference between revisions of "1977 AHSME Problems/Problem 28"
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Let <math>r(x)</math> be the remainder when <math>g(x^{12})</math> is divided by <math>g(x)</math>. Then <math>r(x)</math> is the unique polynomial such that | Let <math>r(x)</math> be the remainder when <math>g(x^{12})</math> is divided by <math>g(x)</math>. Then <math>r(x)</math> is the unique polynomial such that | ||
<cmath>g(x^{12}) - r(x) = x^{60} + x^{48} + x^{36} + x^{24} + x^{12} + 1 - r(x)</cmath> | <cmath>g(x^{12}) - r(x) = x^{60} + x^{48} + x^{36} + x^{24} + x^{12} + 1 - r(x)</cmath> |
Revision as of 16:19, 19 June 2021
Solution 1
Let be the remainder when
is divided by
. Then
is the unique polynomial such that
is divisible by
, and
.
Note that is a multiple of
. Also,
Each term is a multiple of
. For example,
Hence,
is a multiple of
, which means that
is a multiple of
. Therefore, the remainder is
. The answer is (A).
Solution 2
We express the quotient and remainder as follows.
Note that the solutions to
correspond to the 6th roots of unity, excluding
. Hence, we have
, allowing us to set:
We have
values of
that return
. However,
is quintic, implying the remainder is of degree
— contradicted by the
solutions. Thus, the only remaining possibility is that the remainder is a constant
.