Least Positive Integer Problem | AIME I, 2000 | Question 1

Join Trial or Access Free Resources

Try this beautiful problem from the American Invitational Mathematics Examination, AIME, 2000 based on Least Positive Integer.

Least Positive Integer Problem - AIME I, 2000


Find the least positive integer n such that no matter how \(10^{n}\) is expressed as the product of any two positive integers, at least one of these two integers contains the digit 0.

  • is 107
  • is 8
  • is 840
  • cannot be determined from the given information

Key Concepts


Product

Least positive integer

Integers

Check the Answer


Answer: is 8.

AIME I, 2000, Question 1

Elementary Number Theory by Sierpinsky

Try with Hints


\(10^{n}\) has factor 2 and 5

for n=1 \(2^{1}\)=2 \(5^{1}\)=5

for n=2 \(2^{2}\)=4 \(5^{2}=25\)

for n=3 \(2^{3}\)=8 \(5^{3}=125\)

........

for n=8 \(2^{8}\)=256 \(5^{8}=390625\)

here \(5^{8}\) contains the zero then n=8.

Subscribe to Cheenta at Youtube


More Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram