ahaicon1          29. COO!                    backwardarrow1

‘Have you seen this latest crazy Aha! problem?’ asked Ros.

‘Listen to this:
2 x 5 = 10, 3 x 37 = 111, 4 x 25 = 100, 5 x 2 = 10, 6 x 185 = 1110

Now, given any integer n, can we always find a multiple which has only the digits 0 and 1?’

Lyn was feeding her pigeons and only half listening. One of the holes in the loft was bigger than the others, and held two pigeons. ‘This is the principal pigeon hole!’ she laughed.

‘Well,’ said Ros thoughtfully, ‘it does illustrate the pigeon hole principle: n + 1 pigeons and n pigeon holes means two birds in the one hole.’

‘I don’t see what is so special about that,’ Lyn answered. ‘Surely that’s obvious.’

‘I think it is important,’ said Ros. ‘For example, if we have n + 1 numbers and we divide them by n, then two of the remainders must be equal. In fact ... terrific Lyn! I can solve this Aha!

Can you?

pigeon2

Hint 1

Hint 2

Solution

Extensions

ROhint1
ROhint2
ROsolution
ROextensions