Saturday, October 17, 2015

3.10, due on October 19

1. I had a hard time understanding 4 and 5 of the Jacobi Proposition. How can n be congruent to anything other than 0 (mod n) (in 4.)?

2. I know I've learned the Jacobian before . . . I don't remember how to do it, so is this the same thing, by the same guy, or completely different altogether?

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