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Awesome Math 2011 1 Prime Kenken V: Ber in The Top Corner of The Cage Using The Mathematical Operation Indicated

This document describes a 4x4 prime number KenKen puzzle where the goal is to fill in the cages with prime numbers such that the operations indicated produce the target numbers. It then shows the step-by-step logic used to solve the puzzle, determining that cage [19] must be addition of 2 and 17, and other cages must be multiplication. The full solved puzzle is presented.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
35 views4 pages

Awesome Math 2011 1 Prime Kenken V: Ber in The Top Corner of The Cage Using The Mathematical Operation Indicated

This document describes a 4x4 prime number KenKen puzzle where the goal is to fill in the cages with prime numbers such that the operations indicated produce the target numbers. It then shows the step-by-step logic used to solve the puzzle, determining that cage [19] must be addition of 2 and 17, and other cages must be multiplication. The full solved puzzle is presented.

Uploaded by

CK
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Awesome Math 2011

1 Prime KenKen V

In the regular puzzle KenKen, the numbers in each heavily outlined set of
squares, called cages, must combine (in any order) to produce the target num-
ber in the top corner of the cage using the mathematical operation indicated.
A number can be repeated within a cage as long as it is not in the same row
or column. In this 4 × 4 puzzle, the four numbers are known only to be
prime numbers. In contrast to most KenKen puzzles, here you must figure
out which operations produce the target numbers. Of course any cage with
more than two cells must be multiplication or addition.

2 19 14

10

24 10 34

36

1
Awesome Math 2011

Solution. Since 19 is odd, there must be a 2 in the cage [19] and since
21 is not prime, the cage cannot be a subtraction cage. Therefore {[19]} =
{[19+]} = {2, 17}. Let’s locate the 2 in row d. It cannot be in the cage [36]
or in the cage [24], so d4 = 2. Now the 2 in row c must be in the [10] cage,
so it must be multiplicative and {[10×]} = {2, 5}. Summarizing, we have

1 2 3 4
2 19 14

a
2, 17

10

b 2, 17

24 10 34

c 17
2, 5 2, 5

36

d 2

2
Awesome Math 2011

A little puzzling enables us to place all four 2’s and their partners.

1 2 3 4
2 19 14

a 2
10

b 2 5 17
24 10 34

c 2 5 17
36

d 2

3
Awesome Math 2011

This leaves only two places for the other two 5’s. The complete solution
is given below.

1 2 3 4
2 19 14

a 17 19 2 5
10

b 2 5 17 19
24 10 34

c 19 2 5 17
36

d 5 17 19 2

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