|
||
Title: Prime congruence... Post by Michael_Dagg on Sep 17th, 2007, 3:15pm With p prime, show that (x + y)n = xn + yn (mod p) iff n is a power of p. |
||
Title: Re: Prime congruence... Post by pex on Sep 18th, 2007, 1:29am on 09/17/07 at 15:15:23, Michael_Dagg wrote:
Really? (1 + 2)5 = 15 + 25 (mod 3) |
||
Title: Re: Prime congruence... Post by Aryabhatta on Sep 18th, 2007, 1:31am I think he meant for all x,y... |
||
Title: Re: Prime congruence... Post by Barukh on Sep 18th, 2007, 2:37am I guess it may be shown by using this property (http://www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~wwu/cgi-bin/yabb/YaBB.cgi?board=riddles_putnam;action=display;num=1139008533;start=0#2). |
||
Title: Re: Prime congruence... Post by Michael_Dagg on Sep 18th, 2007, 8:34am It was meant as a polynomial congruence. |
||
Title: Re: Prime congruence... Post by JP05 on Sep 18th, 2007, 6:40pm I smell the binomial theorem. If you subtract the right from the left in that congruence you get (x+y)^n - x^n - y^n = sum(k=1 to n-1) B(n,k) x^k y^(n-k), where B(n,k) is n!/(k!(n-k)!). Pondering this I think I could come up with a method by contradiction if I spent more time with it since it must be that if n is not a power of p then not all of the B(n,k) are divisible by p. I am thinking. |
||
Title: Re: Prime congruence... Post by Eigenray on Sep 18th, 2007, 7:00pm Remark: For each prime p, define a http://www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~wwu/YaBBImages/symbols/preceqp b <-> C(b,a) is not divisible by p. It may be interesting to note that this is actually a partial order on the set of natural numbers. Personally, I find it even more interesting that this partial order is actually useful! Edit: Here C(b,a) = (bCa) = {b \choose a} = b!/(a!(b-a)!) is a binomial coefficient. |
||
Title: Re: Prime congruence... Post by JP05 on Sep 18th, 2007, 7:22pm Eigenray I understand your left side of that relation as partial order but what do you mean by C(b,a)? |
||
Title: Re: Prime congruence... Post by JP05 on Sep 18th, 2007, 11:22pm Duh! Thanks. Your C(n,k) is my B(n,k). |
||
Title: Re: Prime congruence... Post by Michael_Dagg on Sep 19th, 2007, 11:19am > think I could come up with a method by contradiction But that's not enough. |
||
Powered by YaBB 1 Gold - SP 1.4! Forum software copyright © 2000-2004 Yet another Bulletin Board |