2003 IMO Problems/Problem 6

Revision as of 23:49, 18 November 2023 by Tomasdiaz (talk | contribs) (Solution)

2003 IMO Problems/Problem 6

Problem

p is a prime number. Prove that for every p there exists a q for every positive integer n, so that $n^p-p$ can't be divided by q.

Solution

This problem needs a solution. If you have a solution for it, please help us out by adding it.

Let N be $1 + p + p^2 + ... + p^{p-1}$ which equals $\frac{p^p-1}{p-1}$ $N\equiv{p+1}\pmod{p^2}$ Which means there exists q which is a prime factor of n that doesn't satisfy $q\equiv{1}\pmod{p^2}$. \\unfinished

See Also

2003 IMO (Problems) • Resources
Preceded by
Problem 5
1 2 3 4 5 6 Followed by
Last Problem
All IMO Problems and Solutions