AoPSWiki
Do you have what it takes to be the next brilliant trader, researcher, or developer at Jane Street Capital? Find out in the Careers in Mathematics Forum.

1994 AIME Problems/Problem 5

From AoPSWiki

Problem

Given a positive integer n\,, let p(n)\, be the product of the non-zero digits of n\,. (If n\, has only one digits, then p(n)\, is equal to that digit.) Let

S=p(1)+p(2)+p(3)+\cdots+p(999)
.

What is the largest prime factor of S\,?

Contents

Solution

Solution 1

Suppose we write each number in the form of a three-digit number (so 5 \equiv 005), and since our p(n) ignores all of the zero-digits, replace all of the 0s with 1s. Now note that in the expansion of

(1+ 1 +2+3+4+5+6+7+8+9) (1+ 1 +2+3+\cdots+9) (1+ 1 +2+3+\cdots+9)

we cover every permutation of every product of 3 digits, including the case where that first 1 represents the replaced 0s. However, since our list does not include 000, we have to subtract 1. Thus, our answer is the largest prime factor of (1+1+2+3+\cdots +9)^3 - 1 = 46^3 - 1 = (46-1)(46^2 + 46 + 1) = 3^3 \cdot 5 \cdot 7 \cdot \boxed{103}.

Solution 2

Note that p(1)=p(11), p(2)=p(12), p(3)=p(13), \cdots p(19)=p(9), and p(37)=3p(7). So p(10)+p(11)+p(12)+\cdots +p(19)=46, p(10)+p(11)+\cdots +p(99)=46*45=2070. We add p(1)+p(2)+p(3)+\cdots +p(10)=45 to get 2115. When we add a digit we multiply the sum by that digit. Thus 2115\cdot (1+1+2+3+4+5+6+7+8+9)=2115\cdot 46=47\cdot 45\cdot 46. But we didn't count 100, 200, 300, ..., 900. We add another 45 to get 45\cdot 2163. The largest prime factor of that is \boxed{103}.

See also

1994 AIME (ProblemsResources)
Preceded by
Problem 4
Followed by
Problem 6
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
Want to learn how to tackle those tough AMC/AIME/Olympiad algebra problems? Check out Art of Problem Solving's Intermediate Algebra by Richard Rusczyk and Mathew Crawford. Over 1600 problems!
© Copyright 2008 AoPS Incorporated. All Rights Reserved. • FoundationPrivacyContact Us