Number Play l Exercise 5.5 l Class 8 l NCERT Solutions l Ganita Prakash

Chapter: Number Play

Exercise 5.5 – Stepwise Solutions

Question 1

If 31z5 is a multiple of 9, where z is a digit, what is the value of z? Explain why there are two answers to this problem.

Solution

A number is divisible by 9 if the sum of its digits is divisible by 9.

Given number:

31z5

Sum of digits:

3+1+z+5=9+z

For divisibility by 9,

9+z

must be a multiple of 9.

Possible values:

  • If z=0,

9+0=9

which is divisible by 9.

  • If z=9,

9+9=18

which is also divisible by 9.

Therefore,

z=0 or z=9​

Why are there two answers?

Because both 9 and 18 are multiples of 9, and both are possible sums of digits.

Question 2

“I take a number that leaves a remainder of 8 when divided by 12. I take another number which is 4 short of a multiple of 12. Their sum will always be a multiple of 8,” claims Snehal. Examine his claim and justify your conclusion.

Solution

First number:

A number leaving remainder 8 when divided by 12 can be written as:

12a+8

Second number:

A number 4 less than a multiple of 12 can be written as:

12b−4

Their sum:

(12a+8)+ (12b−4) =12a+12b+4=12(a+b) +4

Now check whether this is always divisible by 8.

Take an example:

Let

a=1, b=1

Then,

First number:

12(1)+8=20

Second number:

12(1)−4=8

Sum:

20+8=28

But

28÷8=remainder 4

So 28 is not divisible by 8.

Therefore, Snehal’s claim is false.

The sum is not always a multiple of 8.

Question 3

When is the sum of two multiples of 3, a multiple of 6 and when is it not? Explain the different possible cases, and generalise the pattern.

Solution

Multiples of 3 are of two types:

  • Even multiples of 3:
    6,12,18,…
  • Odd multiples of 3:
    3,9,15,…

Case 1: Even multiple + Even multiple

Example:

12+18=30

30 is divisible by 6.

So, the sum is a multiple of 6.

Case 2: Odd multiple + Odd multiple

Example:

9+15=24

24 is divisible by 6.

So, the sum is a multiple of 6.

Case 3: Even multiple + Odd multiple

Example:

12+9=21

21 is not divisible by 6.

So, the sum is not a multiple of 6.

Generalisation

The sum of two multiples of 3 is a multiple of 6 when both multiples are:

  • Both even, or
  • Both odd.

It is not a multiple of 6 when one is even and the other is odd.

Same parity ⇒ multiple of 6​

Different parity ⇒ not a multiple of 6

Question 4

Sreelatha says, “I have a number that is divisible by 9. If I reverse its digits, it will still be divisible by 9.”

(i) Examine if her conjecture is true for any multiple of 9.

Solution

A number is divisible by 9 if the sum of its digits is divisible by 9.

Reversing digits does not change the sum of digits.

Example:

729

Sum of digits:

7+2+9=18

18 is divisible by 9.

Reverse the number:

927

Sum of digits:

9+2+7=18

Again divisible by 9.

Therefore, the reversed number is also divisible by 9.

Hence, Sreelatha’s conjecture is true.

Reversing digits of a multiple of 9 still gives a multiple of 9​

(ii) Are any other digit shuffles possible such that the number formed is still a multiple of 9?

Solution

Yes.

Any rearrangement (shuffle) of the digits keeps the digit sum unchanged.

Since divisibility by 9 depends only on the sum of digits, every shuffle will also be divisible by 9.

Example:

243→324, 432, 234

All have digit sum:

2+4+3=9

Hence all are divisible by 9.

Any digit arrangement remains divisible by 9​

 

Question 5

If 48a23b is a multiple of 18, list all possible pairs of values for a and b.

Solution

A number is divisible by 18 if it is divisible by:

  • 2, and 9

Step 1: Divisibility by 2

The last digit b must be even.

So,

b=0,2,4,6,8

Step 2: Divisibility by 9

Sum of digits must be divisible by 9.

Digits are:

4+8+a+2+3+b=17+a+b

For divisibility by 9:

17+a+b

must be a multiple of 9.

Possible multiples near 17 are:

18 or 27

Case 1

17+a+b=18 where a+b=1

Possible even values of b:

  • b=0⇒a=1

So pair:

(1,0)

Case 2

17+a+b=27 where a+b=10

Possible even values of b:

  • b=0⇒a=10 ✗ not a digit
  • b=2⇒a=8
  • b=4⇒a=6
  • b=6⇒a=4
  • b=8⇒a=2

Possible pairs:

(8,2), (6,4), (4,6), (2,8)

Final Answer

(a,b)=(1,0), (8,2), (6,4), (4,6), (2,8)

Question 6

If 3p7q8is divisible by 44, list all possible pairs of values for p and q.

Solution

A number is divisible by 44 if it is divisible by:

  • 4
  • 11

Step 1: Divisibility by 4

The last two digits are:

q8

The number q8 must be divisible by 4.

Possible values:

08, 28, 48, 68, 88

Therefore,

q=0, 2,4,6,8

Step 2: Divisibility by 11

For divisibility by 11:

(3+7+8)− (p+q) must be divisible by 11.

18− (p+q)

Possible values:

18− (p+q) =0 or 11

Case 1

18− (p+q) =0

Possible pair 🙁 10, 8)

But 10 is not a digit.

So no solution.

Case 2

18−(p+q)=11 and p+q=7

Possible values:

  • q=0⇒p=7
  • q=2⇒p=5
  • q=4⇒p=3
  • q=6⇒p=1

Final Answer

(7,0), (5,2), (3,4), (1,6)

Question 7

Find three consecutive numbers such that the first number is a multiple of 2, the second number is a multiple of 3, and the third number is a multiple of 4.

Are there more such numbers? How often do they occur?

Solution

Let the numbers be:

n, n+1, n+2

Conditions:

  • n divisible by 2
  • n+1 divisible by 3
  • n+2 divisible by 4

Try numbers:

2, 3, 4

Check:

  • 2÷2=1 ✓
  • 3÷3=1 ✓
  • 4÷4=1 ✓

Another example:

14, 15, 16

Check:

  • 14 divisible by 2 ✓
  • 15 divisible by 3 ✓
  • 16 divisible by 4 ✓

Another example:

26, 27, 28

Conclusion

Yes, there are many such numbers.

Question 8

Write five multiples of 36 between 45,000 and 47,000.

Solution

Divide 45000 by 36:

45000÷36=1250

36×1250=45000

Now add 36 repeatedly:

45036 , 45072 , 45108 , 45144 , 45180

Final Answer

45036, 45072, 45108, 45144, 45180​

Question 9

The middle number in the sequence of 5 consecutive even numbers is 5p. Express the other four numbers in sequence in terms of p.

Solution

Consecutive even numbers differ by 2.

Middle number:

5p

Two numbers before it:

5p−4, 5p−2

Two numbers after it:

5p+2, 5p+4

Final Answer

5p−4, 5p−2, 5p, 5p+2, 5p+4​

Question 10

Write a 6-digit number that is divisible by 15, such that when the digits are reversed, it is divisible by 6.

Solution

A number divisible by 15 must be divisible by:

  • 3
  • 5

Choose:

123450

Check divisibility by 15:

  • Last digit is 0✓
  • Sum of digits:

1+2+3+4+5+0=15

15 is divisible by 3 ✓

So 123450 is divisible by 15.

Reverse the digits:

054321=54321

But 54321 is not divisible by 6.

Try another number:

124560

Digit sum:

1+2+4+5+6+0=18

Divisible by 3 ✓

Last digit 0 ✓

So divisible by 15.

Reverse:

065421=65421

Not divisible by 6.

Now choose:

0421350

Digit sum:

4+2+1+3+5+0=15

Divisible by 3 ✓

Last digit 0 ✓

Reverse:

053124=53124

Check divisibility by 6:

  • Even ✓
  • Digit sum:

5+3+1+2+4=15

Divisible by 3 ✓

So divisible by 6.

Final Answer

421350

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