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Odd and Even: Difference of Squares (Posted on 2003-04-16) |
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Any product of two evens or two odds (sticking just to positives for the purpose of this problem) can be expressed as a difference of two perfect squares. 11*17=187=196-9 is an example.
A: Prove this idea.
B: Come up with a formula that gives the two perfect squares. Call the larger one a and the smaller one b.
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Submitted by Gamer
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Rating: 3.0000 (4 votes)
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Solution:
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(Hide)
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Express a as (x + y) and b as (x - y) and since a-b is even (odd-odd and even-even are even), in 2y=a-b, y must be an integer. This means x is an integer as well because y, x+y, and x-y are all integers.
(x+y)(x-y) expands to (x*x)-(y*y), and since x and y are integers, (x*x) and (y*y) are both perfect squares.
The formula is shown in the proof. Since 2y is a-b, just take half of a-b to find y. And since the average of (x+y) and (x-y) is x, use that to find x.
So the numbers are ((a+b)/2)² and ((a-b)/2)². |
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