< High School Mathematics Extensions < Primes 
      | HSME | 
| Content | 
|---|
| Primes | 
| Modular Arithmetic | 
| Problems & Projects | 
| Problem Set | 
| Project | 
| Solutions | 
| Exercise Solutions | 
| Problem Set Solutions | 
| Misc. | 
| Definition Sheet | 
| Full Version | 
| PDF Version | 
Problem Set
1. Is there a rule to determine whether a 3-digit number is divisible by 11? If so, derive that rule.
2. Show that p, p + 2 and p + 4 cannot all be primes if p is an integer greater than 3.
3. Find x
4. Show that there are no integers x and y such that
5. In modular arithmetic, if
for some m, then we can write
we say, x is the square root of y mod m.
Note that if x satisfies x2 ≡ y, then m - x ≡ -x when squared is also equivalent to y. We consider both x and -x to be square roots of y.
Let p be a prime number. Show that
(a)
where
E.g. 3! = 1*2*3 = 6
(b)
Hence, show that
for p ≡ 1 (mod 4), i.e., show that the above when squared gives one.
    This article is issued from Wikibooks. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.