2014 AMC 10B Problems/Problem 17

Revision as of 18:53, 27 December 2019 by Masterwinston (talk | contribs) (Solution 1)

Problem 17

What is the greatest power of $2$ that is a factor of $10^{1002} - 4^{501}$?

$\textbf{(A) } 2^{1002} \qquad\textbf{(B) } 2^{1003} \qquad\textbf{(C) } 2^{1004} \qquad\textbf{(D) } 2^{1005} \qquad\textbf{(E) }2^{1006}$

Solution 1

We begin by factoring the $2^{1002}$ out. This leaves us with $5^{1002} - 1$.

We factor the difference of squares, leaving us with $(5^{501} - 1)(5^{501} + 1)$. We note that all even powers of $5$ more than two end in ...$625$. Also, all odd powers of five more than 42$end in  ...$125$. Thus,$(5^{501} + 1)$would end in ...$126$and thus would contribute one power of two to the answer, but not more.

We can continue to factor$ (Error compiling LaTeX. Unknown error_msg)(5^{501} - 1)$as a difference of cubes, leaving us with$(5^{167} - 1)$times an odd number (Notice that the other number is$5^{334} + 5^{167} + 1$. The powers of$5$end in$5$, so the two powers of$5$will end with$0$. Adding$1$will make it end in$1$. Thus, this is an odd number).$(5^{167} - 1)$ends in ...$124$, contributing two powers of two to the final result.

Or we can see that$ (Error compiling LaTeX. Unknown error_msg)(5^{501} - 1)$ends in 124, and is divisible by$2$only. Still that's$2$powers of 2.

Adding these extra$ (Error compiling LaTeX. Unknown error_msg)3$powers of two to the original$1002$factored out, we obtain the final answer of$\textbf{(D) } 2^{1005}$.

Solution 2

First, we can write the expression in a more primitive form which will allow us to start factoring. \[10^{1002} - 4^{501} = 2^{1002} \cdot 5^{1002} - 2^{1002}\] Now, we can factor out $2^{1002}$. This leaves us with $5^{1002} - 1$. Call this number $N$. Thus, our final answer will be $2^{1002+k}$, where $k$ is the largest power of $2$ that divides $N$. Now we can consider $N \pmod{16}$, since $k \le 4$ by the answer choices.

Note that \begin{align*} 5^1 &\equiv 5 \pmod{16} \\ 5^2 &\equiv 9 \pmod{16} \\ 5^3 &\equiv 13 \pmod{16} \\ 5^4 &\equiv 1 \pmod{16} \\ 5^5 &\equiv 5 \pmod{16} \\ &\: \: \qquad \vdots \end{align*} The powers of $5$ cycle in $\mod{16}$ with a period of $4$. Thus, \[5^{1002} \equiv 5^2 \equiv 9 \pmod{16} \implies 5^{1002} - 1 \equiv 8 \pmod{16}\] This means that $N$ is divisible by $8= 2^3$ but not $16 = 2^4$, so $k = 3$ and our answer is $2^{1002 + 3} =\boxed{\textbf{(D)}\: 2^{1005}}$.


See Also

2014 AMC 10B (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 16
Followed by
Problem 18
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All AMC 10 Problems and Solutions

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