If 2^P and 5^P start with the same (non-zero) digit for positive integer P, what is that digit? Can you prove it must be so?
Write down the squares of the integers from 1 to 9:
1: 1
2: 4
3: 9
4: 16
5: 25
6: 36
7: 49
8: 64
9: 81
Therefore the product of two numbers with the same starting digit i has its first digit in the following range:
1: 1-3
2: 4-9
3: 9 or 1
4: 1-2
5: 2-3
6: 3-4
7: 4-6
8: 6-8
9: 8-9
The product of 2^p and 5^p is 10^p and starts with 1, therefore the starting digit of 2^p and 5^p could only be 1, 3 or 4.
1 does not work because the product of 2^p and 5^p would have non-zero's somewhere after the starting digit, which is only possible if 2^p and 5^p have zero's only, which is not the case.
4 does not work because the second digit would be between 6-9.
Leaves only 3.
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Posted by JLo
on 2006-12-03 12:13:40 |