Notice that $2^{4n+5}\equiv 2^{4n}2^5 \equiv 16^n\cdot 32 \equiv 2^n\cdot 4\equiv 2^{n+2}$.
And notice that if $k=3$ then $2^3 \equiv 8 \equiv 1 \pmod 7$. That implies if $n = 3j + r$ where $r$ is the remainder of $n$ then $2^{n}\equiv 2^{3j+r} \equiv 2^{3j}2^r\equiv (2^3)^j2^r \equiv 1^j2^r \equiv 2^r$. And as $r$ can be $0,1,2$ we have $2^n\equiv 2^0,2^1,2^2\equiv 1,2,4$ depending on what $n\pmod 3$ is equivalent to.
....
So our answer will depend on if $n = 3k$ or $n = 3k + 1$ or $n = 3k + 2$ for some $k$.
- Suppose $n = 3k$ for some $k$..
Then $(2n+1)2^{4n + 5}\equiv 3\pmod 7$
$(6k+1)2^{12k}32\equiv 3\pmod 7$ now $6\equiv -1$ and $32\equiv 4$ and $2^{12k}\equiv(2^3)^{4k}\equiv 1$ so
$(-k+1)4 \equiv 3\pmod 7$
$-4k + 4\equiv 3\pmod 7$
$-4k \equiv -1 \pmod 7$
$4k \equiv 1 \pmod 7$
If we multiply both sides by $2$ we get
$8k\equiv 2\pmod 7$ so
$k \equiv 2 \pmod 7$ and $k = 7L + 2$ for some $L$ nad $n = 3k = 21L + 6$.
(Not the same answer as the book; could someone check if I made an arithmetic error.)
- Suppose $n = 3k + 1$ for some $k$
$(2n+1)2^{4n+5}\equiv 3\pmod 7$
$(6k + 3)2^{12k + 9}\equiv 3\pmod 7$
$(-k+3)(2^3)^{4k+3}\equiv 3\pmod 7$
$-k + 3 \equiv 3 \pmod 7$
$k \equiv 0 \pmod 7$.
so $k = 7L$ for some $L$ and $n = 3(7L) + 1 = 21L + 1$
(Ditto errors)
- Suppose $n=3k+2$ for som $k$
$(3n+1)2^{4n+5}\equiv 3\pmod 7$
$(6k + 5)2^{12k+13}\equiv 3\pmod 7$
$(-k-2)2^{12k+12}2\equiv 3\pmod 7$
$(-k-2)2 \equiv 3\pmod 7$
$2k + 4 \equiv -3\equiv 4 \pmod 7$
$2k \equiv 0\pmod 7$
$k \equiv 0\pmod 7$
So $k = 7L$ for so $L$ and $n=3(7L) + 2 = 21L + 2$.
(Ditto)
=== below is my old work =====
So if $n = 3j + r$ and $r=\begin{cases}0\\1\\2\end{cases}$ then
$(2n+1)2^{4n+5}\equiv (2(3j+r)+1)2^{r+2}\equiv$
$6j2^{r+2} + 2r2^{r+2} + 2^{r+2} \equiv -j2^{r+2} + r2^{r+3} + 2^{r+2}\equiv$
$-j2^{r+2} + r2^{r} + 2^{r+2}\equiv$
$-j2^{\begin{cases}2\\0\\1\end{cases}} + r2^{\begin{cases}0\\1\\2\end{cases}} + 2^{\begin{cases}2\\0\\1\end{cases}}\equiv $
$-j\begin{cases}4\\1\\2\end{cases}+ \begin{cases}0\\1\\2\end{cases}\begin{cases}1\\2\\4\end{cases}+\begin{cases}4\\1\\2\end{cases}\equiv$
$-j\begin{cases}4\\1\\2\end{cases}+ \begin{cases}0\\2\\1\end{cases}+\begin{cases}4\\1\\2\end{cases}\equiv$
$-j\begin{cases}4\\1\\2\end{cases}+ \begin{cases}4\\3\\3\end{cases}\equiv3 \pmod 7$
So
$-j\begin{cases}4\\1\\2\end{cases}+ \begin{cases}1\\0\\0\end{cases}\equiv0 \pmod 7$
There are three cases to solve
I) $r = 0$ and $-4j +1 \equiv 0 \pmod 7$
Let $3j+1 \equiv 0\pmod 7$
So if $j= 7k + s; s= 0,1,2,3,4,5,6$ we get
$3s + 1\equiv 0\pmod 7$ and the only one that fits is $s=2$.
so we can have $j = 7k + 2$ and $n = 3j= 3(7k+2)= 21k + 6$ for any $k$.
II) $r =1$ and $-j \equiv 3\pmod 7$
$j \equiv -3 \equiv 4 \pmod 7$.
so we can have $j = 7k + 4$ and $n = 3j + 1 = 3(7k + 4)+1 = 21k + 13$ for any $k$.
II) $r =2$ and $-2j \equiv 3\pmod 7$
$2j \equiv -3 \equiv 4 \pmod 7$.
If $j = 7k + s; s=0,1,2,3,4,5,6$ then $s=2$ is the only one that works
So $j = 7k + 2$ and $n = 3j + 2 = 21k + 8$ for any $k$.
Those are the solutions.
\pmod{7}
instead of(mod 7)
to correctly display $\pmod{7}$ instead of $(mod 7)$. $\endgroup$ – DMcMor Jan 13 at 18:52