68068 as difference of two squares

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68068 can be expressed as the difference of two squares, and the discussion reveals that it can be factored into prime components. The initial calculation suggested 16 distinct values for x, but it was clarified that pairs (x, b) and (b, x) should be considered the same, reducing the count to 8 unique representations. The reasoning behind the even nature of 'a' is explained, emphasizing that if 'a' were odd, the product would not yield an even number. The conversation highlights the importance of understanding the constraints imposed by the factors in the equation. Ultimately, the correct answer for the number of ways to express 68068 as a difference of two squares is confirmed to be 8.
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Homework Statement


In how many ways can 68068 be written as the difference of two squares?

Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


Let (x+a) * (x+a) -x*x =68068=2*2*7*11*13*17
a (2x+a) =2*2*7*11*13*17
As 2x+a is odd ⇒ a is even
∴a=2b
2b (2x+2b) =2*2*7*11*13*17
b (x+b) =7*11*13*17
x= (7*11*13*17) /b - b
Since 7*11*13*17 has 16 factors ∴ x has 16 different values
However, the book states 8 as the answer.
 
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It looks like you need to account for the pairs (x,b) (b,x) , since those would not be distinct differences of squares.
 
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RUber said:
It looks like you need to account for the pairs (x,b) (b,x) , since those would not be distinct differences of squares.
I guess you are right. (a, b) and (b, a) are repeated in my solution, taking pair (a,b) and (b,a) as a single pair yields 8 as the answer.
 
Robert Houdart said:
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I guess you are right. (a, b) and (b, a) are repeated in my solution, taking pair (a,b) and (b,a) as a single pair yields 8 as the answer.

That's not quite the reason. Remember that you had factors b and x+b. That implies a constraint.
 
Could you please explain why 2x+a is odd
 
Rochette_rocket said:
Could you please explain why 2x+a is odd
If you're talking about these lines in post #1:
a (2x+a) =2*2*7*11*13*17
As 2x+a is odd ⇒ a is even
We have ##a(2x + a)## being equal to an even number.
If a were odd, then 2x + a would also be odd, and we would have an odd integer times another odd integer, which can't possibly multiply to make an even integer.
Therefore, a must be even.
All of this can be proven more rigorously than how I've stated things.
 
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