This website is a semi-functional mirror of the original Project Euler. More information is available on GitHub.
projecteuler.net

Constraining the least greatest and the greatest least

Problem 350

Published on 10 September 2011 at 07:00 pm [Server Time]

A list of size n is a sequence of n natural numbers.
Examples are (2,4,6), (2,6,4), (10,6,15,6), and (11).

The greatest common divisor, or gcd, of a list is the largest natural number that divides all entries of the list.
Examples: gcd(2,6,4) = 2, gcd(10,6,15,6) = 1 and gcd(11) = 11.

The least common multiple, or lcm, of a list is the smallest natural number divisible by each entry of the list.
Examples: lcm(2,6,4) = 12, lcm(10,6,15,6) = 30 and lcm(11) = 11.

Let f(G, L, N) be the number of lists of size N with gcd ≥ G and lcm ≤ L. For example:

f(10, 100, 1) = 91.
f(10, 100, 2) = 327.
f(10, 100, 3) = 1135.
f(10, 100, 1000) mod 1014 = 3286053.

Find f(106, 1012, 1018) mod 1014.


Answer:
Go to back to Problems