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This is a exam question, something related to network security, I have no clue how to solve this!

Last two digits of $7^4$ and $3^{20}$ is $01$, what is the last two digits of $14^{5532}$?

6 Answers6

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By the Chinese remainder theorem, it is enough to find the values of $14^{5532}\mod 4$ and $\bmod25$.

Now, clearly $\;14^{5532}\equiv 0\mod 4$.

By Euler's theorem, as $\varphi(25)=20$, and $14$ is prime to$25$, we have: $$14^{5532}=14^{5532\bmod20}=14^{12}\mod25.$$ Note that $14^2=196\equiv -4\mod25$, so $14^{12}\equiv 2^{12}=1024\cdot 4\equiv -4\mod25$.

Now use the C.R.T.: since $25-6\cdot4=1$, the solutions to $\;\begin{cases}x\equiv 0\mod 4\\x\equiv -4\mod 25\end{cases}\;$ are: $$x\equiv \color{red}0\cdot25-6\cdot{\color{red}-\color{red}4}\cdot 4= 96\mod 100$$ Thus the remainder last two digits of $14^{5532}$ are $\;96$.

Bernard
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  • CRT is overkill since $, -4\equiv 0\pmod 4, $ so $\ x\equiv -4\pmod{100}\ $ is a solution. We can simplify even further noting $,14,$ is a square mod $,25,,$ see my answer. – Bill Dubuque Dec 15 '16 at 02:12
  • @Bill Dubuque: Yes, but I think the question the general way to solve. Your comment is useful to show students they can, and certainly should, think before applying any general solution. – Bernard Dec 17 '16 at 00:08
  • OP makes no mention of that. In fact the OP says it's an exam question, so speed is important, so widely applicable optimizations such as this CRT constant case optimization are surely of interest; i.e. above $,x\equiv \color{#c00}{-4}\pmod{!4\ &\ 25}\iff x\equiv \color{#c00}{-4}\pmod{4\cdot 25}.,$ Ditto for the complete elimination of CRT as in my answer. But of course I do agree that one should know both the general / mechanical results as well as the special cases / optimizations, shortcuts, and detours. – Bill Dubuque Dec 17 '16 at 00:26
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Finding the last two digits necessarily implies $\pmod{100}$

As $(14^n,100)=4$ for $n\ge2$

Let use start with $14^{5532-2}\pmod{100/4}$ i.e., $14^{5530}\pmod{25}$

As $14^2\equiv-2^2\pmod{25}$

Now $2^5\equiv7,2^{10}\equiv7^2\equiv-1\pmod{25}$

$\implies14^{10}=(14^2)^5\equiv(-2^2)^5=-2^{10}\equiv-1(-1)\equiv1$

As $5530\equiv0\pmod{10},14^{5530}\equiv14^0\pmod{25}\equiv1$

Now use $a\equiv b\pmod m\implies a\cdot c\equiv b\cdot c\pmod {m\cdot c} $

$\displaystyle14^{5530}\cdot14^2\equiv1\cdot14^2\pmod{25\cdot14^2}$

As $100|25\cdot14^2,$

$\displaystyle14^{5530+2}\equiv14^2\pmod{100}\equiv?$

3

${\rm mod}\,\ \color{#c00}{25}\!:\, \ 14\equiv 8^{\large 2}\Rightarrow\, 14^{\large 10}\equiv \overbrace{8^{\large 20}\equiv 1}^{\rm\large Euler\ \phi}\,\Rightarrow\, \color{#0a0}{14^{\large 1530}}\equiv\color{#c00}{\bf 1}$

${\rm mod}\ 100\!:\,\ 14^{\large 2}\, \color{#0a0}{14^{\large 1530}} \equiv 14^{\large 2} (\color{#c00}{{\bf 1}\!+\!25k}) \equiv 14^{\large 2} \equiv\, 96$

Bill Dubuque
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  • The prior line essentially uses a generalization of the mod distributive law below $$\large ca,\bmod, cn, =, c,(a\bmod n)$$ See this answer for more on this viewpoint. To be clear, you don't need to know about this to understand the above answer. It's merely a tangential remark for enrichment. – Bill Dubuque Dec 17 '16 at 01:02
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The OP quickly realizes that we can't write $14^k \equiv 1 \pmod{100}$ with $k \gt 0$, but there are still relations to be found in (multiplicative) semigroups.

If the last digit of integers $a$ and $b$ end in $6$, then the last digit of the product ends in $6$. This motivates us to write

$\quad 14^2 \equiv 96 \equiv -4 \pmod{100}$

and

$\quad 96^2 \equiv 16 \pmod{100}$
$\quad 96^3 \equiv 36 \pmod{100}$
$\quad 96^4 \equiv 56 \pmod{100}$
$\quad 96^5 \equiv 76 \pmod{100}$
$\quad 96^6 \equiv 96 \pmod{100}$

and

$\quad 96^{36} \equiv 96 \pmod{100}$
$\quad 96^{216} \equiv 96 \pmod{100}$
$\quad 96^{1296} \equiv 96 \pmod{100}$

So

$\; 14^{5532} = (14^2)^{2766} \equiv 96^{2766} \equiv (96^{1296})^2 (96^{174}) \equiv 96^{176} \equiv (96^{36})^4 (96^{32}) \equiv 96^{36} \equiv 96 \pmod{100}$

CopyPasteIt
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Consider the following class of exam questions:

If $n$ is even find the last two digits of $n^k$.

There is a quick way of cranking out the answers by giving the multiplicative semigroup,

enter image description here

contained in $\mathbb {Z} / \text{100} \mathbb {Z}$, a central/absorbing role.

We know that $76 \times 76 \equiv 76 \pmod{100}$ and more generally that for any $a$ in the semigroup

$\quad 76 \times a \equiv a \pmod{100}$

(we actually have a group with the identity being $76$)

We know that there is an easy calculation algorithm that can be used to multiply any two of these residue numbers.

Example: For $56 \times 96 \pmod{100}$ the tens digit is equal to the residue $5 + 9 + 3 \pmod{10}$:

$\quad 56 \times 96 \equiv 76 \pmod{100}$

We know that given an even integer $n$ such that $n \not\equiv 0 \pmod{10}$, at least one of the residue classes

$\quad [n], [n^2], [n^4] \quad \pmod{100}$

belongs to our semigroup.

We know that given an even integer $n$ such that $n \not\equiv 0 \pmod{10}$,

$\quad n^{20} = 76 \pmod{100}$

Now with these preliminaries we can mentally turn the crank (recall that $14^2 = 196$) ,

$\; 14^{5532} \equiv 76 \times 14^{12} \equiv 76 \times (14^2)^6 \equiv 76 \times (96)^2 \times (96)^2 \times (96)^2 \equiv$
$\quad \quad \quad \quad 76 \times 16 \times 16 \times 16 \equiv 96 \pmod{100}$

CopyPasteIt
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The following calculations can be easily done by hand on scrap paper, but we organized this preparatory work on a google sheet.

The outputs from these formulas

enter image description here

are

enter image description here

With this done we can mentally write out

$\quad 14^{5532} \equiv (16) (56) (36) (56) (36) (16) (36) \equiv$

$\quad\quad\quad\quad (56) (56) (36) (56) (36) (36) \equiv$

$\quad\quad\quad\quad (36) (36) (56) (36) (36) \equiv$

$\quad\quad\quad\quad (96) (56) (96) \equiv$

$\quad\quad\quad\quad (16) (56) \text{ mod 100} $

Since $(10 + 6)(50 + 6) = 500 + 60 + 300 + 36$, we can write

$\quad 14^{5532} \equiv 96 \text{ mod 100} $

CopyPasteIt
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