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Question:

Show that if $n$ is a positive integer such that $24$ divides into $n + 1$, then $24$ divides the sum of all divisors of $n$ (denoted in number theory by $\sigma(n)$ or $\sigma_1(n)$).

For example if $n = 95$, then $n + 1 = 96 = 4 \times 24$ and the sum of the divisors of $n$ is $1 + 5 + 19 + 95 = 120 = 5 \times 24.$ (Note that the number $n$ is included among its divisors.)

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    Also see: [What is so special about the divisors of 24?](http://math.illinoisstate.edu/schebol/talks/divisorsof24.pdf)2012-01-31

2 Answers 2

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We use a pairing argument, working first modulo $3$ and then modulo $8$.

We are told that $n\equiv -1\pmod{24}$. It follows that $n\equiv -1\pmod{3}$. Split the set of divisors of $n$ into unordered pairs $\{a,b\}$ such that $ab=n$. (Since $n\equiv -1\pmod 3$, the number $n$ is not a perfect square, so every divisor of $n$ is taken care of.)

For any pair $\{a,b\}$ with $ab=n$, one of $a$ and $b$ is congruent to $1$ modulo $3$, and the other is congruent to $-1$. So all pair sums are congruent to $0$. Therefore the sum of all pair sums, that is, the sum of the divisors, is congruent to $0$ modulo $3$.

The same idea works modulo $8$. We are told that $n\equiv -1\pmod{8}$. If $\{a,b\}$ is an unordered pair with $ab=n$, then either (i) One of $a$ and $b$ is congruent to $1$ modulo $8$, and the other is congruent to $-1$, or (ii) One of $a$ and $b$ is congruent to $3$ modulo $8$, and the other is congruent to $-3$. In either case the sum is congruent to $0$ modulo $8$.

Thus the sum of the divisors of $n$ is divisible by $3$ and by $8$, and therefore by $24$.

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    @Thomas Andrews: Thanks for finding the potentially very confusing typo. I had remarked that nothing can be paired with itself because of the $\equiv -1\pmod{3}$ condition. That was insufficiently precise, so the parenthetical remark has been changed to "because $n\equiv -1 \pmod{3}$, $n$ cannot be a perfect square." Thanks for suggesting the improvement.2012-01-28
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We're looking for divisors $a, b$ such that $a \times b = n \equiv - 1 \pmod{24}$. In order for this to be possible, $a$ and $b$ must both be coprime to 24. Now note the following:

$a \times b \equiv -1 \pmod{24}$

$a^2 + a \times b \equiv a^2 -1 \pmod{24}$

$a(a + b) \equiv (a-1)(a+1) \pmod{24}$

Since $a$ is coprime to 24, and thus $a$ is odd, $(a-1), (a+1)$ must be even numbers. Furthermore, they are consecutive even numbers and thus at least one of them is also divisible by 4. In addition, as $a$ is coprime to 24, one of $(a-1), (a+1)$ must be divisible by 3 because if $a \equiv 1 \pmod{3}$ then $3|(a-1)$ and if $a \equiv 2 \mod{3}$ then $3|(a+1)$. This means that $4 \times 2 \times 3 = 24 | (a+1)(a-1)$. As $a$ is coprime to 24, this implies that $(a + b) \equiv 0 \pmod{24}$ for all $a, b$.