A "Pythagorean Plus One" triple can be defined as any three distinct integers a, b, c, such all three of these are one more than a perfect square, and also a times b equals c.
What is the lowest value of c possible?
(In reply to
People seem to be wrong... by Euan)
a=2,b=5,c=10 is the answer. Please reread the puzzle. It says that each is one more than a perfect square (2=1+1, 5=4+1, 10=9+1), and a times b = c (2 times 5 = 10.) It doesn't say a^2 times b^2 = c^2).
By the way, everybody always says "perfect square". Is there any other kind ?
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Posted by Penny
on 2004-06-05 20:21:35 |