2007 USAMO Problems/Problem 5
Problem
(Titu Andreescu) Prove that for every nonnegative integer , the number
is the product of at least
(not necessarily distinct) primes.
Solutions
Solution 1
The proof is by induction. The base is provided by the case, where
. To prove the inductive step, it suffices to show that if
for some positive integer
then
is composite. As a consequence,
has at least two more prime factors than does
. To confirm that
is composite, observe that
Also each factor exceeds 1. It suffices to check the smaller one;
gives
Hence
is composite and the proof is complete.
Solution 2
We prove by induction on that
is the product of at least
(not necessarily distinct) primes.
For , we have
, which has
prime factors.
Thus, the base case holds.
Assume that for some , the number
is the product of at least
primes.
We must show that
has at least
prime factors.
Let . Since
is odd, we can apply the Aurifeuillian factorization:
.
Each factor is an integer greater than 1, so the factorization is nontrivial.
The first factor is , which by the inductive hypothesis has at least
prime factors.
It remains to show that the quotient
is composite.
From the factorization above, we have
,
which is clearly the product of two integers greater than 1, and thus composite.
Therefore, is always composite, and hence
has at least two more prime factors than
.
By the inductive hypothesis, has at least
prime factors, so
has at least
prime factors.
By induction, is the product of at least
(not necessarily distinct) primes for all nonnegative integers
.
Alternate solutions are always welcome. If you have a different, elegant solution to this problem, please add it to this page.
See also
- <url>viewtopic.php?t=145849 Discussion on AoPS/MathLinks</url>
2007 USAMO (Problems • Resources) | ||
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Followed by Problem 6 | |
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