Difference between revisions of "2021 Fall AMC 10B Problems/Problem 19"
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We can rewrite <math>N</math> as <math>\frac{7}{9}\cdot 9999\ldots999 = \frac{7}{9}\cdot(10^{313}-1)</math>. | We can rewrite <math>N</math> as <math>\frac{7}{9}\cdot 9999\ldots999 = \frac{7}{9}\cdot(10^{313}-1)</math>. | ||
When approximating values, as we will shortly do, the minus one will become negligible so we can ignore it. | When approximating values, as we will shortly do, the minus one will become negligible so we can ignore it. | ||
− | When we take the power of ten out of the square root, we’ll be multiplying by another power of ten, so the leading digit will not change. Thus the leading digit of <math>f(r)</math> will be equal to the leading digit of <math>\sqrt[r]{\frac{7}{9} \cdot 10^{313(mod | + | When we take the power of ten out of the square root, we’ll be multiplying by another power of ten, so the leading digit will not change. Thus the leading digit of <math>f(r)</math> will be equal to the leading digit of <math>\sqrt[r]{\frac{7}{9} \cdot 10^{313(mod </math> <math> r)}}</math>. |
Then <math>f(2)</math> is the first digit of <math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{9}\cdot(10)} = \sqrt{\frac{70}{9}} = \sqrt{7.\ldots} \approx 2</math> | Then <math>f(2)</math> is the first digit of <math>\sqrt{\frac{7}{9}\cdot(10)} = \sqrt{\frac{70}{9}} = \sqrt{7.\ldots} \approx 2</math> |
Revision as of 22:10, 7 January 2022
Contents
[hide]Problem
Let be the positive integer
, a
-digit number where each digit is a
. Let
be the leading digit of the
th root of
. What is
Solution 1
We can rewrite as
.
When approximating values, as we will shortly do, the minus one will become negligible so we can ignore it.
When we take the power of ten out of the square root, we’ll be multiplying by another power of ten, so the leading digit will not change. Thus the leading digit of
will be equal to the leading digit of $\sqrt[r]{\frac{7}{9} \cdot 10^{313(mod$ (Error compiling LaTeX. Unknown error_msg) $r)}}$ (Error compiling LaTeX. Unknown error_msg).
Then is the first digit of
.
.
.
.
The final answer is therefore
~KingRavi
Solution 2
For notation purposes, let be the number
with
digits, and let
be the leading digit of
. As an example,
, because
, and the first digit of that is
.
Notice that for all numbers
; this is because
, and dividing by
does not affect the leading digit of a number. Similarly,
In general, for positive integers
and real numbers
, it is true that
Behind all this complex notation, all that we're really saying is that the first digit of something like
has the same first digit as
and
.
The problem asks for
From our previous observation, we know that
Therefore,
. We can evaluate
, the leading digit of
, to be
. Therefore,
.
Similarly, we have
Therefore,
. We know
, so
.
Next,
and
, so
.
We also have
and
, so
.
Finally,
and
, so
.
We have that .
~ihatemath123
Solution 3 (Condensed Solution 1)
Since is a
digit number and
is around
, we have
is
.
is the same story, so
is
. It is the same as
as well, so
is also
. However,
is
mod
, so we need to take the 5th root of
, which is between
and
, and therefore,
is
.
is the same as
, since it is
more than a multiple of
. Therefore, we have
which is
.
~Arcticturn
Solution 4
First, we compute .
Because ,
.
Because
,
.
Therefore, .
Second, we compute .
Because ,
.
Because
,
.
Therefore, .
Third, we compute .
Because ,
.
Because
,
.
Therefore, .
Fourth, we compute .
Because ,
.
Because
,
.
Therefore, .
Fifth, we compute .
Because ,
.
Because
,
.
Therefore, .
Therefore,
Therefore, the answer is .
~Steven Chen (www.professorchenedu.com)
Solution 5 (Guessing)
Benford's Law states that in random numbers, the leading digit is more likely to be or
rather than
or
. From here, we can eliminate C, D, E. It is better to guess between A and B than not guess at all since your expected score from doing this is
points.
~MathFun1000
See Also
2021 Fall AMC 10B (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 18 |
Followed by Problem 20 | |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 • 16 • 17 • 18 • 19 • 20 • 21 • 22 • 23 • 24 • 25 | ||
All AMC 10 Problems and Solutions |
The problems on this page are copyrighted by the Mathematical Association of America's American Mathematics Competitions.