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(Excuse me for my english: I'm spanish speaker)

"Find a three digit number $\overline{xyz}$ such that $x^2 +y^2 + z^2$ is equal to the number (xyz). "

I have this equation: $x^2 -100x +(y^2-10y+z^2-z)=0$

And the discriminant (in $x$):

$\Delta_x = -4y^2 +40y-4z^2+4z+10000$

Solutions for $x_i$ are: $x_i = \frac{100 \pm \sqrt{\Delta_x}}{2}$

in which ${\Delta_x} \geq 0$. The obvious conditions are:

i) $x \neq 0$ and $x=1,..., 9$;

ii) $y, z = 0, ..., 9$.

I need an orientation because pick $(y,z) \in \{0,...9\} \times \{0,...9\}$ I believe it's arduous task.

Another "attemp" from myself is to find $(x, y, z) \in \{1,...9\} \times \{0,...9\} \times \{0,...9\} $ such that

$(x-50)^2 + (y-5)^2 +\left(z- \frac{1}{2}\right)^2 = \frac{10101}{4}$ but I'm not skilfull in multivariable calculus :(

Any advice is welcome.

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    I did a quick check on Wolfram Alpha and http://tinyurl.com/7x6uwx7 according to that the number of integer solutions are $320$ (Read carefully, 320 is not the solution, but there are 320 integer solutions). You might have to tell us which context (which book) or something of that sort then it will give a better idea about a shorter approach to solve this.2012-03-13

4 Answers 4

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small Maple program :

for x from 0 to 9 do for y from 0 to 9 do for z from 0 to 9 do if x^2+y^2+z^2 = 100*x+10*y+z then print(x,y,z); end if; end do; end do; end do; 

There is no such $\overline{xyz}$

10

Since $x^2+y^2+z^2\leq 3\times 9^2 = 243$, we know that $x=0$, $x=1$, or $x=2$. But if $x=2$, then $x^2+y^2+z^2 \leq 2\times 9^2 + 4 = 166$, so we must definitely have $x=0$ or $x=1$.

But $x=1$ doesn't work: that would give us a maximum possible total of $1+9^2+9^2 = 163$; that would meant that $y\leq 6$; but then the best we can do is $1+6^2+9^2 = 118$, which means $y\leq 1$, but then we can't even get to $100$, since the maximum possible total would be $1+1+81$.

So we must have $x=0$.

Now we are down to $y^2+z^2 = 10y+z$, or $y^2 - 10y + (z^2-z) = 0$.

This means $y = 5\pm \frac{\sqrt{100 - 4(z^2-z)}}{2}$. So $100-4(z^2-z)$ must be an even square. So $z^2-z$ must be $0$, $9$, $16$, $21$, $24$, or $25$.

Since $z^2-z = z(z-1)$, with $0\leq z\leq 9$ integral, this means the total cannot be $9$, $21$, or $25$. If $z\gt 1$, then we cannot have a perfect square, which excludes $16$; and $24$ cannot be written as a product of consecutive integers, which only leaves $z^2-z=0$. Thus, $z=0$ or $z=1$. Both lead to $y=0$ or $y=10$, but the latter is impossible.

So the only possibilities are $000$ and $001$.

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It seems that solving it for $y$ is a better idea, as we are going to have $y=5\pm\sqrt{something}$.

Let us solve it for a number with any number of digits: $\overline{...vwxyz}$.

$y^2-10y+(z^2-z)+(x^2-100x)+(w^2-1000w)+...=0$

$y=5\pm\sqrt{25-(z^2-z)-(x^2-100x)-(w^2-1000w)-...}$.

Note, that $0\le y\le9$, therefore, $0\le(z^2-z)+(x^2-100x)+(w^2-1000w)+...\le25$.

But $z^2-z\le9^2-9=72$, while $x^2-100x\le1^2-100=-99$ for $1\le x\le9$, $w^2-1000w\le-999$ for $1\le w\le9$ etc.

Hence, $x=w=...=0$ and $25-z(z-1)$ is a square. For $z=0,1,2,3,4,5$ we get $25,25,23,19,13,5$ and only the first two are squares.

The only two numbers are $0$ and $1$.

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    Really Nice! Thanks.2012-03-14
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I cheated and programmed :) It's only 0 and 1. For some related reference see: http://mathworld.wolfram.com/HappyNumber.html

The second sentence shows that there are no other for any integer.