A polynomial f with integer coefficients is written on the blackboard. The teacher is a mathematician who has 3 kids named Andrew, Beth and Charles. Andrew, who is 7, is the youngest, and Charles is the oldest. When evaluating the polynomial on his kids' ages he obtains:
f(7) = 77
f(b) = 85, where b is Beth's age,
f(c) = 0, where c is Charles' age.
How old is each child?
In some cases an nth and a higher order polynomial, each with integer coefficients, can go through the same n integer points. E.g. y=2x and y=x^2 each go through (0,0) and (2,4).
So, is their any aspect of this problem that excludes additional higher order polynomials?
This question arises from Paul's complete solution being independent of the quadratic equation offered. Is the quadratic possibly one of many?
Edited on August 19, 2023, 7:17 pm