practice problems pending from Q2.
Q1. Can product of eight consecutive integers be the perfect 4-th power of an integer? S1. n(n+1)(n+2)...(n+7) rearrange: n(n+7)(n+1)(n+6)(n+2)(n+5)(n+3)(n+4) Let a = n^2 + 7n + 6 Then product becomes: P = (a-6).a.(a+4).(a+6) = a^4 + 4a^3 -36a^2 - 144a (a+1)^4 = a^4 + 4a^3 + 6a^2 + 4a + 1 This is clearly more than the above product. Why? Since a is positive. (a+1)^4 > P Can we show a^4 < P? P = a^4 + 4a(a^2 - 9a - 36), a^2 - 9a - 36 = (a-12)(a+3) > 0 since a >= 14 for n = 1 => a^4 < P < (a+1)^4 H.P. that it can't be 4th power. Q2. S2. Evaluate the expression: Denominator would become: k(k+1) Numerator = k^4 + 2k^3 + 3k^2 + 2k + 1 = (k^2+k+1)^2 So each term is: (k^2 + k + 1)/(k^2 + k) = 1 + 1/k(k+1) 1/k(k+1) = 1/k - 1/k+1 Now upon addition: 1s add upto 40. And telescopic sum for the rest: 1/1 - 1/2 1/2 - 1/3 ..... 1/40 - 1/41 Add all to get: 1/1 - 1/41 = 40/41 So the final sum is 40 + 40/41 a + b = 80 = answer Another method: if x + y + z = 0 then: (1/x + 1/y ...