Difference between revisions of "1983 AIME Problems/Problem 8"

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Expanding the [[combination|binomial coefficient]], we get <math>{200 \choose 100}=\frac{200!}{100!100!}</math>. Let the prime be <math>p</math>; then <math>10 \le p < 100</math>. If <math>p > 50</math>, then the factor of <math>p</math> appears twice in the denominator. Thus, we need <math>p</math> to appear as a factor three times in the numerator, or <math>3p<200</math>. The largest such prime is <math>\boxed{061}</math>, which is our answer.
 
Expanding the [[combination|binomial coefficient]], we get <math>{200 \choose 100}=\frac{200!}{100!100!}</math>. Let the prime be <math>p</math>; then <math>10 \le p < 100</math>. If <math>p > 50</math>, then the factor of <math>p</math> appears twice in the denominator. Thus, we need <math>p</math> to appear as a factor three times in the numerator, or <math>3p<200</math>. The largest such prime is <math>\boxed{061}</math>, which is our answer.
  
== See also ==
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== See Also ==
 
{{AIME box|year=1983|num-b=7|num-a=9}}
 
{{AIME box|year=1983|num-b=7|num-a=9}}
  
 
[[Category:Intermediate Combinatorics Problems]]
 
[[Category:Intermediate Combinatorics Problems]]
 
[[Category:Intermediate Number Theory Problems]]
 
[[Category:Intermediate Number Theory Problems]]

Revision as of 07:01, 16 April 2012

Problem

What is the largest 2-digit prime factor of the integer ${200\choose 100}$?

Solution

Expanding the binomial coefficient, we get ${200 \choose 100}=\frac{200!}{100!100!}$. Let the prime be $p$; then $10 \le p < 100$. If $p > 50$, then the factor of $p$ appears twice in the denominator. Thus, we need $p$ to appear as a factor three times in the numerator, or $3p<200$. The largest such prime is $\boxed{061}$, which is our answer.

See Also

1983 AIME (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 7
Followed by
Problem 9
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
All AIME Problems and Solutions