If a^2 is divisible by 3, then a is divisible by 3

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the mathematical statement that if \( a^2 \) is divisible by 3, then \( a \) must also be divisible by 3. Participants are exploring methods of proof, particularly through contradiction and contrapositive reasoning.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • One participant considers a proof by contradiction, questioning the implications of assuming \( a \) is not divisible by 3 and attempting to derive a contradiction from that assumption. Another participant suggests exploring the contrapositive of the statement and encourages thinking about representations of natural numbers not divisible by 3. A third participant provides specific cases for \( a \) based on its form relative to 3, analyzing the resulting expressions for divisibility.

Discussion Status

Participants are actively engaging with different proof strategies, with some providing specific cases and reasoning. There is a recognition of the validity of various approaches, but no explicit consensus has been reached on a single method. The discussion is productive, with participants building on each other's ideas.

Contextual Notes

Participants are working within the constraints of natural numbers and the properties of divisibility, particularly focusing on the implications of prime factorization and the characteristics of numbers in relation to 3.

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Homework Statement



Assume a is a natural number and that a^2 is divisible by 3 (that is, there exists natural number n so that 3n = a^2)

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



I thought about doing this one by contradiction. Suppose a is not divisible by 3. Then a/3 can be written as

a/3 = b/c

where b and c are natural numbers with no common factors. From there I square both sides to get

(a^2)/9 = b^2/c^2

My plan was to then show that this implies (a^2)/3 is NOT a natural number, a contradiction, which would imply no such b and c exist. I'm not certain if this is the right angle, however, since I had a hard time justifying that 3(b^2)/c^2 is not a natural number.
 
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Another way to go about it is to show that the contrapositive is true. You are saying that if a^2 is divisible by 3, then so is a. The contrapositive is that if a is not divisible by 3, then a^2 isn't either. If a is not divisible by 3, how can it be written? Can you think of a way to write any natural number that is not divisible by 3 in a general way?

If you are having a hard time with this, think about how you can write any even number. How about any odd number? Does a similar concept apply to 3?
 
I think I follow you.

Suppose 3 does not divide a. Then a can be written as 3n-1 or 3n-2 for some natural number n.

Case 1: a = 3n-1.
Then a^2 = 9n^2-6n+1 which is not divisible by 3 since (3n^2-2n+1/3) is the sum of two natural numbers and a fraction, which is not a natural number.

Case 2: a = 3n-2.
Then a^2 = 9n^2-12n+4 which is not divisible by three by similar reasoning.

But we know a^2 is divisible by three so we have a contradiction. Therefore, a must also be divisible by 3.
 
That works. It's easier you know 3 is prime and just think about prime factorizations, but that still works.
 

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