Halo3 Wrote:Ron,
I'm missing something in the following step
"Thus, all integers up to 50 - including all prime numbers up to 50 - are factors of h(100).
Therefore, h(100) + 1 cannot have any prime factors 50 or below, since dividing this value by any of these prime numbers will yield a remainder of 1. "
So because h(100) can be factored by every integer up to 50 means that h(100)+1 can't have a prime factor below 50? Not quite getting this one... Please flush out.
Thanks-
i'll assume you mean "
flesh out", unless you want this whole thread destroyed (which you presumably don't).
heh heh
the idea is this: if a number is divisible by some prime
p, then the next multiple of
p will be
p units bigger. for instance, 75 is divisible by 5. this means that the next greatest multiple of 5 is 80, which is 5 units away.
hopefully, this fact is clear. once you realize this, it follows that
consecutive integers can't share ANY primes, because they're only 1 unit apart (too close together to work for any common factor except 1, which is trivially a factor of any integer at all, anywhere).
that's the basis for saying h(100) + 1 has no prime factors below 50. if it did, then you'd have two multiples of the same prime 1 unit apart, and that's impossible.