If three numbers 112, 232, and 400 are each divided by the number D, each of their quotients will have the same remainder R. Find R where R>1
How should I approach this?
If three numbers 112, 232, and 400 are each divided by the number D, each of their quotients will have the same remainder R. Find R where R>1
How should I approach this?
Hint: $$112 - R \equiv 0 \mod D$$
$$232 - R \equiv 0 \mod D$$
$$400 - R \equiv 0 \mod D$$
$$120 \equiv 0 \mod D$$ $$168 \equiv 0 \mod D$$
Hence $D$ is a common factor of both $120$ and $168$.
$$24 \equiv 0 \mod D$$
$D \in \{1,2,3,4,6,8,12,24 \}$
Use $R>1$ to identify which $D$ is possible.
We have $112 \equiv 232 \equiv 400 \pmod{D}$. This is equivalent to $D$ dividing their pairwise differences: $D \mid 120,168,288$ and so $D \mid 24$. Therefore, $1,2,3,4,6,8,12,24$ are possibilities for $D$ but since $R > 1$ we have only $D = 6,12,24$.
This is the question that when we subtract $x$ from $112, 232,400$, then we should get three numbers commonly divisible by some $D > x$. That is, $D | 112 - x, 232 - x, 400-x$ for $x < D$.
Before we think twice, I've got the answer: $x=16$ , and the numbers are $96,216,384$, commonly divisible by $24 = D$.
Note that the greatest common divisor of the numbers is $8$: $112 = 8*14, 232=8*29, 400=8*50$ . Hence, if $x$ is a multiple of $8$, then it is seen that the numbers $112-x, 232-x, 400-x$ are divisible by $8$ as well. However, if these all are divisible by $8$, so are their differences: $232-112 = 120, 400-232=168, 400-112 = 288$. These numbers, however, are also divisible by $24$. So we take the guess $24$ and it works out. So $R=16, D=24$ works.
Anything else that must work must be a divisor of $24$, as we have seen. We can rule out some of the possibilities:
1) $D=1,2,4,8$ can be ruled out, because on division by these, the remainder zero is left all the time.
2) On division by $3$, they all leave remainder $1$. So here is one answer, but then $R>1$ is given in the question, so this is not considered.
3) On division by $6$ and $12$, they leave the remainder $4$.
4) On division by $24$, they leave the remainder $16$.
The following is a complete description of the problem's answer.
It's solvable by a general method, viz. CRT = Chinese Remainder Theorem. Recall
$$\begin{align} r \equiv a_1\!\!\!\pmod{d_1}\\ r \equiv a_2\!\!\!\pmod{d_2}\\ r \equiv a_3\!\!\!\pmod{d_3} \end{align}$$
is solvable $\!\iff\!$ the congruences are pairwise solvable $\!\iff\!$ $\,\gcd(d_i,d_j)\mid a_i-a_j\,$ for all $\,i\neq j$
We have $\,a_i = 112,232,400\,$ and $\,d_i = d\,$ $\Rightarrow$ $\,\gcd(d_i,d_j)=d,\,$ so the solvability condition is
$$ \begin{align}d\mid 232\!-\!112=120\\ d\mid 400\!-\!232=168\\ d\mid 400\!-\!112=288\end{align}\iff d\mid\gcd(120,168,288)=24\qquad$$
Now we need only check which divisors of $24$ yield remainder $\,r>1,\,$ which is easy.