AoPSWiki
Want to learn how to tackle those tough AMC/AIME/Olympiad counting and probability problems? Check out Art of Problem Solving's Intermediate Counting & Probability by David Patrick.

Wilson's Theorem

From AoPSWiki

Revision as of 17:29, 28 March 2009 by Boy Soprano II (Talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Current revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Wilson's Theorem is a result in elementary number theory. It states that if p > 1 is in integer, then (p-1)! + 1 is a multiple of p if and only if p is a prime.

Contents

Proofs

Suppose first that p is composite. Then p has a factor d > 1 that is less than or equal to p-1. Then d divides (p-1)!, so d does not divide (p-1)! + 1. Therefore p does not divide (p-1)! + 1.

The converse of this statement is more interesting. We provide two proofs: an elementary one that rests close to basic principles of modular arithmetic, and an elegant method that relies on more powerful algebraic tools.

Elementary proof

Suppose p is a prime. Then each of the integers 1, \dotsc, p-1 has an inverse modulo p. (Indeed, if one such integer a does not have an inverse, then for some distinct b and c modulo p, ab \equiv ac \pmod{p}, so that a(b-c) is a multiple of p, when p does not divide a or b-c—a contradiction.) This inverse is unique, and each number is the inverse of its inverse. If one integer a is its own inverse, then 0 \equiv a^2 - 1 \equiv (a-1)(a+1) \pmod{p} , so that a \equiv 1 or a \equiv p-1. Thus we can partition the set \{ 2 ,\dotsc, p-2\} into pairs \{a,b\} such that ab \equiv 1 \pmod{p}. It follows that (p-1) is the product of these pairs times 1 \cdot (-1). Since the product of each pair is conguent to 1 modulo p, we have (p-1)! \equiv 1\cdot 1 \cdot (-1) \equiv -1 \pmod{p}, as desired. \blacksquare

Algebraic proof

Let p be a prime. Consider the field of integers modulo p. By Fermat's Little Theorem, every nonzero element of this field is a root of the polynomial P(x) = x^p - 1 . Since this field has only p-1 nonzero elements, it follows that x^p - 1 = \prod_{r=1}^{p-1}(x-r) . Now, either p=2, in which case a \equiv -a \pmod 2 for any integer a, or p-1 is even. In either case, (-1)^{p-1} \equiv 1 \pmod{p}, so that x^p - 1 = \prod_{r=1}^{p-1}(x-r) = \prod_{r=1}^{p-1}(-x + r) . If we set x equal to 0, the theorem follows. \blacksquare

Problems

Introductory

  • Let a be an integer such that \frac{1}{1}+\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{3}+\cdots+\frac{1}{23}=\frac{a}{23!}. Find the remainder when a is divided by 13.

Advanced

  • If {p} is a prime greater than 2, define p=2q+1. Prove that (q!)^2 + (-1)^q is divisible by {p}. Solution
  • Let {p} be a prime number such that dividing {p} by 4 leaves the remainder 1. Show that there is an integer {n} such that n^2 + 1 is divisible by {p}.

See also

Stay informed about new Art of Problem Solving developments.
Click here to join our mailing lists.
© Copyright 2008 AoPS Incorporated. All Rights Reserved. • FoundationPrivacyContact Us