practice problems pending
Q1. Prove that for every positive integer (n), the number [ 3^{3^n}+1 ] is the product of at least (2n+1) (not necessarily distinct) primes. S1. Prove by induction. Q2. Prove that for every positive integer (n), there exists an (n)-digit number divisible by (5^n) whose all digits are odd. S2. Proof by induction: Let's assume it holds true for k Now we construct 5 (n+1) digit numbers using A: All 5 of them leave different remainders modulo 5 so at least one of them will leave 0 and that would give us divisibility by 5^(n+1). Why will all be different modulo 5? Let's try to prove by contradiction: 2^n + a = 3.2^n + a mod 5 => 2.2^n = 0 mod 5 false. And each time you do this you will get some even number = 0 mod 5. Which is false. H.P. Q3. Let n be a positive integer. Let 0 < a1 < a2 ... an be real numbers. Prove that at least {n+1}C{2}) of the sums +-a1 +-a2 ... +-an are distinct. S3. First we will show that this problem maps to another simpler problem. And then solve...