by tim Fri Apr 30, 2010 6:17 pm
i hate to say it, but sometimes it's quicker to plug in cleverly chosen numbers to eliminate wrong answers than to do the math for real. When you're dealing with powers, try 0 and 1 first:
B and C both give you 1=1 when n=0, in other words n=0 is a solution for B and C and thus we can eliminate them.
Similarly, 1 is a solution for both D and E, so we can eliminate them.
Proving that A actually has no solution is, frankly, beyond the level of math that the GMAT typically requires in its problems..
Tim Sanders
Manhattan GMAT Instructor
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