touchdownbuckeyes Wrote:Well, thanks Mithun. 84 was the answer I was looking for and i missed it. However it is wrong to state that there can be infinite values and definitely multiples of 84 would not satisfy the conditions. For examples, 168 would be divisible by 8 and so definitely 4 would not be a GCF of 168 and 16.
84 would come out to be the correct answer if we do the prime factorization for all the numbers and get the HCF.
84 = 2*2*3*7
16 = 2*2*2*2
210 = 7*3*2*5
45 = 3*3*5
As per the answer and the information given in the question,
GCF of n and 210 is 42
GCF of n and 16 is 4
GCF of n and 45 is 3.
If this is true, what is the value of n? I am unable to find any value of n that satisfies all the above criteria.
There are infinite solutions. I meant to say "many" instead of "any" in my post. I corrected it.
You can multiple 84 with primes that are not common to 210, 16, or 45. For example, 11, 17, 19 etc... There are infinite solutions.