(In reply to
A start? by Jer)
Jer,
You did the hard part:
1. Clearly, m never divides m^2-m+1
2. Note that m^2-m+1 =(m(m-1))+1. Since (m-1) divides m^2-m, it never divides m^2-m+1 either.
3. But we also have, for any m, m^2-m+1 = (m-1)^2+(m-1)+1:
(m+1) = (m-1)+2
Let (m-1) = n:
(n^2+n+1)/(n+2) = (n-1)+3/(n+2); integral iff n = {1, -1, -3}
4. m^2-m+1+2m = m^2+m+1; as you point out, clearly, these two expressions have no common divisors greater than 1.
So the only candidate is n = 1, i.e. m = 2: 2^6-1 = 63 = 3^2x7; (2^3-1)(2^2-1) = 3*7, satisfying the condition.
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Posted by broll
on 2015-04-25 23:49:52 |