z600
Sigh.....
- Joined
- Feb 18, 2006
- Messages
- 821
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- Male
- HSC
- 2008
I came across this question and I just kept getting an extra term that i cant factorise.
Use mathematical induction to prove these divisibility results. Advance from k to K+2.
For even n: n^3+2n is divisible by 12
I put subbed K+2 in and i turned out an extra term (6K^2)
Could the explantion be the fact that k must be even and when u multiply is by 6 it must be a factor of 12?
thanks
Use mathematical induction to prove these divisibility results. Advance from k to K+2.
For even n: n^3+2n is divisible by 12
I put subbed K+2 in and i turned out an extra term (6K^2)
Could the explantion be the fact that k must be even and when u multiply is by 6 it must be a factor of 12?
thanks