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| Question 117931:  Is it possible for the remainder to be 2 when a prime number that is greater than 2 is divided by 4? Explain why or why not?
 Found 2 solutions by  stanbon, Earlsdon:
 Answer by stanbon(75887)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! Is it possible for the remainder to be 2 when a prime number that is greater than 2 is divided by 4? Explain why or why not? --------------------------
 Is there a solution to x = 2(mod 4) if x is prime and greater than 2 ??
 If so there is an odd prime where 4 divides (x-2) with no remainder.
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 Argument:
 If x is odd, x-2 is odd
 But if x-2 is divisible by 4 it is a multiply of 2
 Then x-2 would be even.
 This contradiction means the assuption that there is
 an odd prime x where x= 2(mod 4) is wrong.
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 Cheers,
 Stan H.
Answer by Earlsdon(6294)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! Not possible! Why, because, by definition, a prime number is divisible only by 1 and itself.
 If a number is divisible by 4, then it is not a prime number, because then the number would have three or more factors (1, 4 and the number itself and possibly others), whereas a prime number has only two factors.
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