2019 AMC 10A Problems/Problem 18
- The following problem is from both the 2019 AMC 10A #18 and 2019 AMC 12A #11, so both problems redirect to this page.
Contents
Problem
For some positive integer , the repeating base-
representation of the (base-ten) fraction
is
. What is
?
Solution 1
We can expand the fraction as follows:
Notice that this is equivalent to
By summing the geometric series and simplifying, we have . Solving this quadratic equation (or simply testing the answer choices) yields the answer
.
Solution 2
Let . Therefore,
.
From this, we see that , so
.
Now, similar to in Solution 1, we can either test if is a multiple of
with the answer choices, or actually solve the quadratic, so that the answer is
.
Solution 3
Just as in Solution 1, we arrive at the equation .
Therefore now, we can rewrite this as . Notice that
. As
is a prime number, we therefore must have that one of
and
is divisible by
. Now, checking each of the answer choices, this will lead us to the answer
.
Solution 4
Assuming you are familiar with the rules for basic repeating decimals, . Now we want our base,
, to conform to
and
, the reason being that we wish to convert the number from base
to base
. Given the first equation, we know that
must equal 9, 16, 23, or generally,
. The only number in this set that is one of the multiple choices is
. When we test this on the second equation,
, it comes to be true. Therefore, our answer is
.
Solution 5
Note that the LHS equals from which we see our equation becomes
Note that therefore divides
but as
is prime this therefore implies
(Warning: This would not be necessarily true if
were composite.) Note that
is the only answer choice congruent satisfying this modular congruence, thus completing the problem.
~ Professor-Mom
==Solution 6==(Cheese and answer choices)
We can find that we just estimate the first two digits and can get and plug in some values and expand into
and plugin some values and find that for 16,
is very close to our target of
so our answer is
.
~ catattackskeyboard
Solution 6 (Risky)
The fraction \( 23/99 = 0.23232323... \)
We have the base representation of \( 7/51 \).
There exists some fraction \( a/b \) such that \( 7/51 \cdot a/b = 23/99 \).
\( a = 23/7 \), \( b = 99/51 \). Our fraction is then \( a/b = (23/7) / (99/51) \Rightarrow (23 \times 51) / (7 \times 99) \Rightarrow 1173/693 \).
Bases must be a multiple of the square of a number. We see that \( \sqrt{1173} \) is about 34 and \( \sqrt{693} \) is about 26. We subtract to get a common square, which is \( 34-26 = 8 \).
Our answer must be a multiple of 8, and the only one is .
~Pinotation
Solution 7 (Also Risky)
Notice how \( 23/99 = 0.232323232323\ldots \), but round it down to \( 0.23 \). \( 7/51 \) is around \( 0.13 \). We then have \( 0.23 - 0.13 = 0.1 \).
Multiply by 1000 to get \( 0.1 \times 1000 = 100 \).
The fraction is the base \( k \) number multiplied by another number divided by 100. The number that gets closest to the number 100 when multiplied by another number is .
~Pinotation
Video Solution by OmegaLearn
https://youtu.be/SCGzEOOICr4?t=1110
~ pi_is_3.14
Video Solution 1
Education, the Study of Everything
Video Solution by WhyMath
~savannahsolver
See Also
2019 AMC 10A (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 17 |
Followed by Problem 19 | |
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 |
2019 AMC 12A (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | |
Preceded by Problem 10 |
Followed by Problem 12 |
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 |
These problems are copyrighted © by the Mathematical Association of America, as part of the American Mathematics Competitions.