Tony Cardell, age 14, State College Area High School, PA, USA and David Aaronson, age 15, The Lawrenceville School, USA both cracked this problem.
The numbers are called a Diophantine n-tuple if is a perfect square whenever \. Tony and David's solutions were almost identical. Given that and we must show that and are all perfect squares. For the first one, as then so is a perfect square. Next, for bc+1, we substitute c=a+b+2q and expand: