Table of contents | |
Unit Digit | |
Cyclicity Table | |
Number of Zeroes | |
Solved Examples |
When we observe the behaviour of these digits, they all have the same unit's digit as the number itself when raised to any power, i.e. 0n = 0, 1n =1, 5n = 5, 6n = 6.
5 2 = 25: Unit digit is 5, the number itself.
16 = 1: Unit digit is 1, the number itself.
04 = 0: Unit digit is 0, the number itself.
63 = 216: Unit digit is 6, the number itself.
Let's apply this concept to the following example.
Example: Find the unit digit of the following numbers:
Both these numbers have a cyclicity of only two different digits as their unit's digit.
42 = 16: Unit digit is 6.
43 = 64: Unit digit is 4.
44 = 256: Unit digit is 6.
45 = 1024: Unit digit is 4.
92 = 81: Unit digit is 1.
93 = 729: Unit digit is 9.
It can be observed that the unit digits 6 and 4 are repeating in an odd-even order. So, 4 has a cyclicity of 2. Similar is the case with 9.
It can be generalized as follows:
Example: Find the unit digit of following numbers:
These numbers have a power cycle of 4 different numbers.
21 = 2, 22 = 4, 23 = 8 & 24 = 16 and after that it starts repeating.
So, the cyclicity of 2 has 4 different numbers 2, 4, 8, 6.
31 = 3, 32 = 9, 33 = 27 & 34 = 81 and after that it starts repeating.
So, the cyclicity of 3 has 4 different numbers 3, 9, 7, 1.
7 and 8 follow similar logic.
So these four digits i.e. 2, 3, 7 and 8 have a unit digit cyclicity of four steps.
The concepts discussed above are summarized in the given table.
The power concept or cyclicity of a number helps us figure out the last digit of a number raised to a large power without actually calculating the whole thing. It's based on a repeating pattern that depends on the last digit of the number. A table helps us predict this last digit. Also, digits that appear once or twice repeat every four times. So, each digit repeats every four times.
Step 1
Step 2
Q. 12 × 15 × 5 × 24 × 13 × 17
(a) 0
(b) 1
(c) 2
(d) 3
Ans: (c)
Sol: 22∗3∗3∗5∗5∗23∗3∗13∗17 = so pairs of (5*2) are 2, so we have 2 zeroes.
Example: n! has 13 zeroes. The highest and least values of n are?
(a) 57 and 58
(b) 59 and 55
(c) 59 and 6
(d) 79 and 55
Ans: (b)
Sol: At 55 we get 13 zeroes, since we know that 50! is 12 zeroes so till 54! we will have 12 zeroes. So 55 to 59! will have 13 zeroes.
Find the number of zeroes in the product 11x 22 x 33 x ...x 4949
Q1: Find the last digit of 55552345 + 66665678
(a) 1
(b) 3
(c) 5
(d) 7
Ans: a
Sol: As the last digit depends only on last digits, consider the powers only for last digits, that is 52345 + 65678 .
As we know, any power of 5 ends only with 5 and any power of 6 ends only with 6.
The last digit of 52345 + 65678 = 5 + 6 = 11 = 1
Hence, option (A) is the correct answer.
Q2: If in a two digit number, the digit at the unit place is z and the digit at the tens place is 8, then the number is
(a) 80z + z
(b) 80 + z
(c) 8z + 8
(d) 80z + 1
Ans: (b)
Sol: Digit at unit’s place = z
The digit at ten’s place = 8
= 2-digit number = (10×8)+(1×z)
= 80 + z
Q3: How many trailing zeroes (zeroes at the end of the number) does 60! have?
(a) 14
(b) 12
(c) 10
(d) 8
Ans: (a)
Sol:
Q4: The number of zeros at the end of the product of
(a) 42
(b) 53
(c) 1055
(d) None of these
Ans: (a)
Sol: The number of zeros at the end of 222111 × 35 53 is 53.
The number of zeros at the end of (7!)6!×(10!)5! is 960.
The number of zeros at the end of 4242×2525 is 42.
Thus the number of zeros at the end of the whole expression is 42.
154 videos|396 docs|723 tests
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1. What is the unit digit of a number and how is it determined? |
2. What is the cyclicity table and how is it used in determining unit digits? |
3. How can the number of zeroes in a number be determined? |
4. Can the unit digit of a number be determined without calculating the entire number? |
5. Why is it important to understand the concept of unit digits in number systems? |
154 videos|396 docs|723 tests
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