Revision as of 06:06, 22 January 2009 by Jberlako (Talk | contribs)


So, you will need to go a little further with explanations of why but the way to go about this one is:

$ \lfloor \sqrt{1000} \rfloor + \lfloor \sqrt[3]{1000} \rfloor - \lfloor \sqrt[6]{1000} \rfloor $

To see why this is correct, draw a Venn Diagram, and take out the common terms.


I didn't think of the 6th root approach, so i just when through and counted the cubes (since there would only be 10) and I found that only 1 and 64 are both squares and cubes.


You missed one. 729 is both a square and a cube. I believe the correct equation would be;

$ \lfloor \sqrt{1000} \rfloor + \lfloor \sqrt[3]{1000} \rfloor - \lfloor \sqrt[5]{1000} \rfloor $

This yields the same answer, but I believe the intersection is the set $ x^2*x^3=x^5 $ meaning you would need the 5th root, not the sixth.

--Jberlako 21:27, 21 January 2009 (UTC)

I have been playing around with this one, and the original equation is right, but I can't figure out why. Can you explain why it is the 6th root rather than the 5th?

--Jberlako 22:34, 21 January 2009 (UTC)

I'm so lost. Is this question "How many bit strings are there of length six or less?"? It's in section 5.1 of my book for some reason!


I guess I don't get why you say the original equation is correct, I thought the second one looked right.

--Rhollowe 00:48, 22 January 2009 (UTC)

If you increase the problem to numbers less than 5000, you include one more integer that is a square and cube, namely 4096.

$ sqrt[5]{5000}=5.49.... /newline sqrt[6]{5000}=4.13... $

This shows that the sixth root is correct. I think I understand what is going on here now. If you have a number that has both a square and cube root it must be the result of the cube of a square or the square of a cube. Look at the 4 numbers we have in the intersection of the sets for this problem

$ 1 = (1^2)^3 \newline 64 = 4^3 = 8^2 where 4 = 2^2 and 8 = 2^3 meaning 64 = (2^2)^3 729 = 27^2 = 9^3 where 27 = 3^3 and 9 = 3^2 meaning 729 = (3^2)^3 4096 = 16^3 = 64^2 where 16 = 4^2 and 64 = 4^3 meaning 4096 = (4^2)^3 As we all know, (x^a)^b = x^(b*a) which in our case gives us x^6. $

--Jberlako 11:05, 22 January 2009 (UTC)

Alumni Liaison

Recent Math PhD now doing a post-doctorate at UC Riverside.

Kuei-Nuan Lin