Difference between revisions of "2014 AMC 12A Problems/Problem 23"
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So, the answer is <math>0+0+0+1+0+2+0+3+...+9+7+9+9=2\cdot10\cdot\frac{9\cdot10}{2}-(9+8)</math> or <math>\boxed{\textbf{(B)}\ 883}</math>. | So, the answer is <math>0+0+0+1+0+2+0+3+...+9+7+9+9=2\cdot10\cdot\frac{9\cdot10}{2}-(9+8)</math> or <math>\boxed{\textbf{(B)}\ 883}</math>. | ||
− | There are two things to notice here. First, <math>\frac{1}{99}</math> has a very simple and unique decimal expansion, as shown. Second, for <math>\frac{0.\overline{01}}{99}</math> to itself produce a repeating decimal, <math>99</math> has to evenly divide a sufficiently extended number of the form <math>101010101..</math>. This number will have <math>99</math> ones (197 digits in total), as to be divisible by <math>9</math> and <math>11</math>. The enormity of this number forces us to look for a pattern. Indeed, upon division (seeing how the remainders always end in "501" or "601" or, at last, "9801"), we find the | + | There are two things to notice here. First, <math>\frac{1}{99}</math> has a very simple and unique decimal expansion, as shown. Second, for <math>\frac{0.\overline{01}}{99}</math> to itself produce a repeating decimal, <math>99</math> has to evenly divide a sufficiently extended number of the form <math>101010101..</math>. This number will have <math>99</math> ones (197 digits in total), as to be divisible by <math>9</math> and <math>11</math>. The enormity of this number forces us to look for a pattern, and so we divide out as shown. Indeed, upon division (seeing how the remainders always end in "501" or "601" or, at last, "9801"), we find the repeating part <math>.000102030405060708091011121315....9799</math>. If we wanted to further check our pattern, we could count the total number of digits in our quotient (not counting the first three): 195. Since <math>99<100</math>, multiplying by it will produce either <math>1</math> or <math>2</math> extra digits, so our quotient passes the test. |
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
{{AMC12 box|year=2014|ab=A|num-b=22|num-a=24}} | {{AMC12 box|year=2014|ab=A|num-b=22|num-a=24}} | ||
{{MAA Notice}} | {{MAA Notice}} |
Revision as of 22:27, 17 November 2016
Contents
Problem
The fraction where is the length of the period of the repeating decimal expansion. What is the sum ?
Solution 1
the fraction can be written as . similarly the fraction can be written as which is equivalent to and we can see that for each there are combinations so the above sum is equivalent to: we note that the sequence starts repeating at yet consider so the decimal will go from 1 to 99 skipping the number 98 and we can easily compute the sum of the digits from 0 to 99 to be subtracting the sum of the digits of 98 which is 17 we get
Solution 2
So, the answer is or .
There are two things to notice here. First, has a very simple and unique decimal expansion, as shown. Second, for to itself produce a repeating decimal, has to evenly divide a sufficiently extended number of the form . This number will have ones (197 digits in total), as to be divisible by and . The enormity of this number forces us to look for a pattern, and so we divide out as shown. Indeed, upon division (seeing how the remainders always end in "501" or "601" or, at last, "9801"), we find the repeating part . If we wanted to further check our pattern, we could count the total number of digits in our quotient (not counting the first three): 195. Since , multiplying by it will produce either or extra digits, so our quotient passes the test.
See Also
2014 AMC 12A (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | |
Preceded by Problem 22 |
Followed by Problem 24 |
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 12 Problems and Solutions |
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