raghav4202 wrote:
option C gives answer as 36 so why cant that be our answer ?
The key word here is
must as in:
Which one of the following expressions must be a perfect square?You already discovered that, if A = 1, B = 2 and C = 3, then A³ + B³ + C³ = 1³ + 2³ + 3³ = 36, and 36 is a perfect square.
So, at this point, we know that A³ + B³ + C³ COULD be a perfect square
That is, we can't yet conclude that A³ + B³ + C³ MUST be a perfect square.
Notice that the values A = 2, B = 4 and C = 6 are also in the ratio 1 : 2 : 3
When we test these values, we get: A³ + B³ + C³ = 2³ + 4³ + 6³ = 288, which is NOT a perfect square.
Eliminate C.
Does that help?