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| OG - Quant Review PS - #169 |
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Emily Sledge
MGMAT STAFF
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Quick citation note: This is from the Official Guide for GMAT Quantitative Review. For copyright reasons, we must cite full source name.
Hi Carla, You are on exactly the right track. Since n is an integer, n^2 must be a perfect square. Thus, the prime factors of n would show up as pairs of those same prime factors in the prime box of n^2. Think of these prime factors of n^2 as socks fresh out of the dryer. The left socks come from one of the n's and the right socks come from the other n. Even though the n^2 prime box has an unmatched factor of 2, you know the other 2 must be there...like an orphan sock in the laundry--you know the other one is around somewhere. In other words, that unmatched 2 is in n^2's prime box--it must have come from n. So, your prime box for n should include a 2 and 3 from the complete pairs and the orphan 2, for a prime box of {2,2,3}. |
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| prime factos |
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Jeff
Guest
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This is one of those problems that you might be able to solve quickly be inspection. You need the smallest perfect square that is divisible by 72. 72 itself does not work, so try the next multiple : 144. If you recognize that 144 is 12^2, then you can mark your answer choice and move on. Otherwise the method that Emily described above will get you there with a little more time and effort.
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Dan Bernstein
MGMAT STAFF
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Good work all! Just one more thing to point out: this can be identified as a higher level question not only by the mathematical content but also by the phrasing of the question itself. By using unconventional wording - "the largest positive integer that must divide n" - rather than the more straightforward "the largest positive integer that must divide evenly into n," the test makers are trying to confuse you with the terminology as well!
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| My thoughts on this question |
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vectorSpace
Guest
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Hello All!
My interpretation of this question was slightly different: and I ended up with a different answer. Here is my reasoning: "The largest positive integer that must divide n" MUST be n itself. (This is true for all n). Hence the question essentially asks us: If n is a positive integer and n^2 is divisible by 72, find n (or the largest value for n) n^2 divisible by 72: This could be used as a test for elimination, and B,C,D,E all qualify as 'positive integers whose squares are divisible by 72'. The largest valued choice, E, would be the most logical. What is the flaw in my reasoning above? Thanks a ton, vectorSpace |
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Stacey Koprince
MGMAT STAFF
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The flaw lies in a crucial distinction between what n COULD be and what n MUST be (or MUST include). It's true that n COULD be divisible by 48, but it doesn't absolutely have to be.
Because of the wording, you can't rephrase this as "what is n" - or "what's the largest number n could be." You actually want the opposite - what's the smallest that n could be, because that will include the factors that MUST be part of n no matter what it actually is. |
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| OG - Quant Review PS - #169 |
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