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No n-th Powers Here! (Posted on 2005-09-05) Difficulty: 3 of 5
Show that the product of three consecutive positive integers cannot be the n-th power of an integer, for any integer n>1.

See The Solution Submitted by McWorter    
Rating: 3.4000 (5 votes)

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re(3): Solution? | Comment 5 of 7 |
(In reply to re(2): Solution? by KC)

Yes, you are correct.  Each prime factor of b^n must occur a multiple of n times.  Hence if b^n=uv, with u relatively prime to v, both u and v are n-th powers.

Also, if anyone asks, consecutive n-th powers differ by more than n because, for z>=1,

(z+1)^n-z^n=z^n+nz^(n-1)+positive stuff-z^n>nz^(n-1)>=n.


  Posted by McWorter on 2005-09-05 22:04:49
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