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integers: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9 |
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| Oct19-09, 06:33 PM | #1 |
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integers: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9
I saw this somewhere, it looks like fun but i cant seem to answer it
integers: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9 [tex]\frac{a}{bc}+\frac{d}{ef}+\frac{g}{hi}=1[/tex] what is a,b,c,d,e,f,g,h,i ? pick from the above integers. (ONLY USE EACH OF THE ABOVE INTEGERS ONCE) :) bc means for example 35 (b=3 and c=5), not multiply. |
| Oct20-09, 08:56 PM | #2 |
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Interesting.
We can always reorder terms such that b < e < h. Once we do that, it's easy to see that b=1 (because if b>1, the whole sum is necessarily less than 1). We can restrict the number of possibilities for a & c further, because, since b=1, d/ef+g/hi is at most 9/24+8/35 ~ 0.603 and therefore a/bc > 0.397. Furthermore, if c is 2, d/ef+g/hi <= 9/35+8/46 ~ 0.431 and a/bc > 0.569. If either a or c is 9, d/ef+g/hi <= 8/24+7/35 ~ 0.533 and a/bc > 0.467. If a and c are 8 and 9, d/ef+g/hi <= 7/24+6/35=0.463 and a/bc > 0.537 (so, a and c can't be 8 and 9, because both 8/19 and 9/18 are less than 0.537). c, f, and i can't be 5. Any two-digit prime number that occurs in decompositions of denominators must occur in at least two denominators. For example, we can rewrite the statement as (d*hi+g*ef)-ef*hi = -a*ef*hi/bc. Right hand side is integer. If bc is a multiple of 13, either ef or hi (or both) must also be multiples of 13. These principles limit the set of possibilities for the first fraction to 16 possibilities: 7/12 8/12 9/12 6/13 7/13 8/13 9/13 6/14 7/14 8/14 9/14 7/16 8/16 9/16 8/17 9/17 At this point, I don't see any clear ways to reduce the set of possibilities further, but we've cut the possibility space enough to start brute-force search for a solution ... |
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