Bad Fraction Reduction That Actually Works \(\displaystyle{\frac{{{16}}}{{{64}}}}={\frac{{{1}}}{{{4}}}}\) This is

Carlo Sawyer

Carlo Sawyer

Answered question

2022-03-16

Bad Fraction Reduction That Actually Works
1664=14
This is certainly not a correct technique for reducing fractions to lowest terms, but it happens to work in this case, and I believe there are other such examples. Is there a systematic way to generate examples of this kind of bad fraction reduction?

Answer & Explanation

zakulisan337

zakulisan337

Beginner2022-03-17Added 3 answers

It's easy to find them all. Suppose 10a+n10n+b=ab. Thus (10ab)n=9ab.
Case 1:
(9,n)=1:9 | 10:ab  9 | ab a=b  9:a:n=9:a2  n=a=b
(trivial)
Case 2:
(9,n)=9:: 10:ab=a:b  ab, 10=(ba):(a+1) so a,b=1,5  or  4,8
which yields the solutions: 1995=15 and 4998=12. Similar analysis of the remaining
Case 3: (9,n)=3: yields 1664=14, and 2665=25.

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