Recently, Bonanova made a comment to one of my problems about Fibonacci numbers. In all honesty I am not too familiar with their work so I began studying it. In researching it I have found a
reference to their congruum problem. But something about it has me stumped; I hope one or more of you can tell me what I am doing wrong:
Quote from the article at the MacTutor History of Mathematics archive
at St. Andrews University:
"[Fibonacci] defined the concept of a congruum, a number of the form
ab(a + b)(a - b), if a + b is even, and 4 times this if a + b is odd
where a and b are integers. Fibonacci proved that a congruum must be
divisible by 24 and he also showed that for x,c such that x^2 + c and
x^2 - c are both squares, then c is a congruum. He also proved that a
square cannot be a congruum."
With x=15 and c=216, we get the two squares 441 and 9, meaning that
216 should be a congruum. Thus we should be able to find numbers a
and b such that
216 = ab(a+b)(a-b) if a+b is even
or
54 = ab(a+b)(a-b) if a+b is odd
Now, b must be smaller than a and d:= ab(a+b)(a-b) is increasing in
both a and b.
Let's look at the possible scenarios.
Say a+b is odd. We want d to equal 54. Our triples (b,a,d) give us
(1,2,6) (1,4,60); thus b=1 is not possible
(2,3,30) (2,5,210); thus b=2 is not possible
(3,4,84); thus b = 3 and b > 3 is not possible (since d is
increasing); thus a+b odd is not possible
Say a+b is even. We want d to equal 216. Our triples (b,a,d) give us
(1,5,120) (1,7,336); thus b=1 is not possible
(2,4,96) (2,6,3849; thus b=2 is not possible
(3,5,360); thus b = 3 and b > 3 is not possible (since d is
increasing); thus a+b even is not possible
So, because 15^2 + 216 = 21^2 and 15^2 - 216 = 3^2 we should have
that 216 is a congruum, but we cannot put it in the form ab(a+b)(a-b).
Question
BMAD
Recently, Bonanova made a comment to one of my problems about Fibonacci numbers. In all honesty I am not too familiar with their work so I began studying it. In researching it I have found a
reference to their congruum problem. But something about it has me stumped; I hope one or more of you can tell me what I am doing wrong:
Quote from the article at the MacTutor History of Mathematics archive
at St. Andrews University:
http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/Mathematicians/Fibonacci.html
"[Fibonacci] defined the concept of a congruum, a number of the form
ab(a + b)(a - b), if a + b is even, and 4 times this if a + b is odd
where a and b are integers. Fibonacci proved that a congruum must be
divisible by 24 and he also showed that for x,c such that x^2 + c and
x^2 - c are both squares, then c is a congruum. He also proved that a
square cannot be a congruum."
With x=15 and c=216, we get the two squares 441 and 9, meaning that
216 should be a congruum. Thus we should be able to find numbers a
and b such that
216 = ab(a+b)(a-b) if a+b is even
or
54 = ab(a+b)(a-b) if a+b is odd
Now, b must be smaller than a and d:= ab(a+b)(a-b) is increasing in
both a and b.
Let's look at the possible scenarios.
Say a+b is odd. We want d to equal 54. Our triples (b,a,d) give us
(1,2,6) (1,4,60); thus b=1 is not possible
(2,3,30) (2,5,210); thus b=2 is not possible
(3,4,84); thus b = 3 and b > 3 is not possible (since d is
increasing); thus a+b odd is not possible
Say a+b is even. We want d to equal 216. Our triples (b,a,d) give us
(1,5,120) (1,7,336); thus b=1 is not possible
(2,4,96) (2,6,3849; thus b=2 is not possible
(3,5,360); thus b = 3 and b > 3 is not possible (since d is
increasing); thus a+b even is not possible
So, because 15^2 + 216 = 21^2 and 15^2 - 216 = 3^2 we should have
that 216 is a congruum, but we cannot put it in the form ab(a+b)(a-b).
What is wrong with this argument?
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