2020 AIME I Problems/Problem 12
Contents
Problem
Let be the least positive integer for which
is divisible by
Find the number of positive integer divisors of
Solution 1
Lifting the Exponent shows that so thus,
divides
. It also shows that
so thus,
divides
.
Now, multiplying by
, we see
and since
and
then
meaning that we have that by LTE,
divides
.
Since ,
and
all divide
, the smallest value of
working is their LCM, also
. Thus the number of divisors is
.
~kevinmathz
Solution 2 (Simpler, just basic mods and Fermat's theorem)
BY THE WAY, please feel free to correct my formatting. I don't know latex.
Note that for all ,
is divisible by
because that is a factor. That is
, so now we can clearly see that the smallest
to make the expression divisible by
is just
. Similarly, we can reason that the smallest
to make the expression divisible by
is just
.
Finally, for , take
and
of each quantity (They happen to both be
and
respectively, so you only need to compute once). One knows from Fermat's theorem that the maximum possible minimum
for divisibility by
is
, and other values are factors of
. Testing all of them(just
,
,
using mods-not too bad),
is indeed the smallest value to make the expression divisible by
, and this clearly is NOT divisible by
.
Therefore, the smallest
to make this expression divisible by
is
.
Calculating the LCM of all these, one gets . Using the factor counting formula,
the answer is
=
.
-Solution by thanosaops -formatted by MY-2
Solution 3 (Elementary and Thorough)
As usual, denote the highest power of prime
that divides
. For divisibility by
, notice that
as
, and upon checking mods,
is divisible by
but not
. In addition,
is divisible by
because
, and the rightmost factor equates to
. In fact,
is the least possible choice to ensure divisibility by
because if
, with
and
, we write
Then, the rightmost factor is equivalent to
, and
.
For divisibility by , we'll induct, claiming that
for whole numbers
. The base case is clear. Then,
By the induction hypothesis,
. Then, notice that
This tells us that
is divisible by
, but not
so that
, completing our induction. We can verify that
is the least choice of
to ensure divisibility by
by arguing similarly to the
case.
Finally, for , we take the powers of
and
in mod
and mod
. Writing out these mods, we have that
if and only if
, in which
. So here we claim that
and perform yet another induction. The base case is true:
, but
. Now then, assuming the induction statement to hold for some
,
Note that
equates to
in both mod
and mod
. We notice that
. Writing out the powers of
mod
, we have
. Also
when
is a multiple of
. Hence for
,
. Thus,
, completing our induction. Applying the same argument from the previous two cases,
is the least choice to ensure divisibility by
.
Our answer is the number of divisors of . It is
.
~hnkevin42
See Also
2020 AIME I (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
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Followed by Problem 13 | |
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