What is the value of the missing number ? [Image of a circle with sect

What is the value of the missing number ?
[Image of a circle with sectors containing numbers: 3,4; 1,5; 3,2; 3,1; 2,3; 2,7; 5,6; 4,5. Inner circle sectors: 5, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 3, ?]

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3
This question was previously asked in
UPSC CAPF – 2020
The puzzle involves pairs of outer numbers and a single inner number in sectors of a circle. Let the outer numbers be `a` and `b`, and the inner number be `c`. We need to find a relationship between `a`, `b`, and `c`.
Observing the first sector with outer numbers (3, 4) and inner number 5, we notice that 3, 4, and 5 form a Pythagorean triple (3² + 4² = 5²). Here, the outer numbers appear to be the legs of a right triangle, and the inner number is the hypotenuse.
Let’s examine the last sector with outer numbers (4, 5) and a missing inner number ?. These numbers (4 and 5) are also part of the 3-4-5 Pythagorean triple. If 4 and 5 were legs, the hypotenuse would be sqrt(4² + 5²) = sqrt(16 + 25) = sqrt(41), which is not an integer option. However, if 5 is the hypotenuse and 4 is one leg, the other leg is calculated by x² + 4² = 5², which gives x² = 25 – 16 = 9, so x = 3.
This suggests a pattern related to the 3-4-5 Pythagorean triple:
– Sector 1 (3,4) -> 5: (leg, leg) -> hypotenuse (3² + 4² = 5²)
– Sector 8 (4,5) -> ?: If 5 is the hypotenuse and 4 is a leg, the missing number (the other leg) is 3 (3² + 4² = 5²).
While this specific pattern might not apply uniformly to *all* sectors using only standard leg/hypotenuse relations (e.g., (1,5)->4, (3,2)->5 don’t form 3-4-5 triples this way), the presence of the (3,4,5) triple in the first sector and the possibility of completing it in the last sector (4,5,?) using one of the options (3) provides the most plausible rule among typical puzzle patterns, especially when other arithmetic operations don’t yield a consistent rule across all sectors. Thus, the missing number is likely 3.
– Examine the relationship between the outer and inner numbers in each sector.
– Look for simple arithmetic operations (addition, subtraction, multiplication, division).
– Look for sequences or patterns across different sectors.
– Consider common mathematical concepts like Pythagorean triples if the numbers suggest it.
– The numbers 3, 4, and 5 in the first sector and 4 and 5 in the last sector strongly suggest a connection to the 3-4-5 Pythagorean triple.
Pythagorean triples are sets of three positive integers a, b, and c, such that a² + b² = c². The most well-known triple is (3, 4, 5). Number puzzles often incorporate basic mathematical properties or sequences. While a perfect, simple pattern across all sectors might not be immediately obvious, the prominent 3-4-5 relationship in the context of the numbers involved makes option 3 the most likely correct answer based on typical puzzle design principles.