Chicken McNugget Theorem

Revision as of 20:00, 11 September 2009 by Maybach (talk | contribs) (Introductory)

The Chicken McNugget Theorem states that for any two relatively prime positive integers $m,n$, the greatest integer that cannot be written in the form $am + bn$ for nonnegative integers $a, b$ is $mn-m-n$.

Proof

Consider the integers $\pmod{m}$. Let $R = \{0, n, 2n, 3n, 4n ... (m-1)n\}$. Note that since $m$ and $n$ are relatively prime, $R$ is a Complete residue system in modulo $m$.

Lemma: For any given residue class $S \pmod{m}$, call $r$ the member of $R$ in this class. All members greater than or equal to $r$ can be written in the form $am+bn$ while all members less than $r$ cannot for nonnegative $a,b$.

Proof: Each member of the residue class can be written as $am + r$ for an integer $a$. Since $r$ is in the form $bn$, this can be rewritten as $am + bn$. Nonnegative values of $a$ correspond to members greater than or equal to $r$. Negative values of $a$ correspond to members less than $r$. Thus the lemma is proven.

The largest member of $R$ is $(m-1)n$, so the largest unattainable score $p$ is in the same residue class as $(m-1)n$.

The largest member of this residue class less than $(m-1)n$ is $(m-1)n - m = mn - m - n$ and the proof is complete.

Problems

Introductory

Marcy buys paint jars in containers of 2 and 7. What's the largest number of paint jars that Marcy can't obtain?

Intermediate

Ninety-four bricks, each measuring $4''\times10''\times19'',$ are to stacked one on top of another to form a tower 94 bricks tall. Each brick can be oriented so it contribues $4''\,$ or $10''\,$ or $19''\,$ to the total height of the tower. How many different tower heights can be achieved using all ninety-four of the bricks? Source

Olympiad

See Also

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