Arrange the digits 1-9 in a 3x3 square using each once only according to the following rules:
- Exactly one prime is directly above a prime two less.
- Each pair of opposite corners sums to the same square total and exactly two columns share another square total.
- Exactly one prime is directly to the left of a non-prime two greater.
- Directly above exactly one square digit is a digit four greater.
- Directly to the right of exactly one cubic digit is a digit one greater.
Some things should be easily deducible.
1) There is a 5 above a 3 OR a 7 above a 5 (herein denoted by [5/3] OR [7/5])
2) Opposite corners total 9
The column totals are 13, 16, 16 (not necessarily in that order)
3) There is a 2 left of a 4 OR 7 left of a 9 (herein denoted by (2,4) OR (7,9))
4) There is [5/1] OR [8/4]
5) There is (1,2) OR (8,9)
(Restraining my amateur notation for the first part)
Consider the number 5 in a column totaling 16,
If the 5 is above the 3 then the remaining number in that column must be an 8. Since the 8 can’t then be above a 4 then 5 must be above 1 (by rule 4) which is a contradiction.
If the 7 is above the 5 then the remaining number in that column must be a 4. Since there is no 8 in the column 8 can’t then be above a 4 and again, by rule 4, 5 must be above 1 which is another contradiction.
So the 5 is in a column totaling 13.
Clearly the 5 can’t be above the 3 since this would require another 5 in the column, so 7 is above the 5 and the other number in the column is a 1.
Options
[1/7/5]
[7,5,1]
If [1/7/5] is the extreme left or right column the other side must be [4/x/8] and this column must total 16. x = 4 is a contradiction to our remit - that you can’t duplicate a number.
If [1/7/5] is in the middle column there is no room for a (8,9) combination and (1,2) must be true. The 2 in the top-right position would require a 7 bottom-left that’s already spoken for.
So, [7/5/1] appears in the solution.
Again if this were the middle column there is no room for the (8,9) and (1,2) must be true – requiring the extra 7 in the 2’s opposite corner.
So [7/5/1] appears as the extreme right or left column with the opposing left or right column being [8/6/2] (since opposite corners sum to 9 and this column must sum to 16).
[7/5/1] as the left column and the right column as [8/6/2] means (1,2) can’t be true so there must be an (8,9) combination – a contradiction with the 8 to the extreme right of the grid.
So [7/5/1] must be the extreme right column.
The rest fills itself.
Answer;
897
635
241
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Posted by Lee
on 2003-12-29 13:00:26 |