I tried to calculate the last two digits of $9^{9^9}$ using Euler's Totient theorem, what I got is that it is same as the last two digits of $9^9$.
How do I proceed further?
I tried to calculate the last two digits of $9^{9^9}$ using Euler's Totient theorem, what I got is that it is same as the last two digits of $9^9$.
How do I proceed further?
On
By the binomial theorem, we have $$(-1+10)^9\equiv{9\choose0}(-1)^910^0+{9\choose1}(-1)^810^1+{9\choose2}(-1)^7{\color{Red}{10^2}}+\cdots$$ $$\equiv-1+90=89\pmod{10^2}.$$ (All summands with powers of $10$ greater than $1$, the first instance in red, can be ignored.)
On
Euler's Theorem is not needed. It can be completely solved using only the Binomial Theorem:
$$\rm 9^{\color{#c00}{\large 10}} =\ (-1+10)^{\color{#c00}{\large 10}} =\: (-1)^{\color{#c00}{\large 10}} - \color{#c00}{10}\cdot 10 + 10^{\large 2}\:(\cdots)\ \color{}{\equiv\ 1}\ \ (mod\ 100)$$
So $\rm \bmod 100\!:\, \ 9^{\large 9^{\LARGE 9}}\!\!\equiv\ 9^{\large 9^{\LARGE 9}\, mod\ \color{#c00}{10}} \equiv\ 9^{\large (-1)^{\LARGE 9}}\!\! \equiv 9^{\large -1}\!\equiv \dfrac{1}9 \equiv \dfrac{-99}9 \equiv {-}11 \equiv 89 $
Remark $ $ Above we used the useful fact that if the powers of $\,a=9\,$ repeat with period length $\color{#c00}{10}\,$ then all exponents on $\,a\,$ can be taken modulo $\,\color{#c00}{10}.\,$ Said more precisely we used the following
$$\ \ \color{#c00}{a^{\color{#c00}{\large 10}}\equiv 1}\!\!\pmod{\!m},\,\ J\equiv K\!\!\!\pmod{\!\color{#c00}{10}}\ \,\Rightarrow\,\ a^{\large J}\equiv a^{\large K}\!\!\!\!\pmod{\!m}$$
for the specific values $\ a=9,\,$ and $\,J = 9^{\large 9},\,$ and $\,K = (9^{\large 9}\,{\rm mod}\ 10).\,$ A proof is easy:
$$ J = K\! +\! 10N\,\Rightarrow\, a^{\large J}\! = a^{\large K+10N}\! = a^{\large K} (\color{#c00}{\large a^{10}})^{\large N}\!\equiv a^{\large K} \color{#c00}1^{\large N}\!\equiv a^{\large K}\!\!\!\!\pmod{\!m}\qquad $$
where we have employed the $ $ Congruence Product and Power Rules. For further discussion see modular order reduction.
Beware $ $ Modular fraction arithmetic is well-defined only for fractions with denominator coprime to the modulus. See here for further discussion.
At this point, it would seem to me the easiest thing to do is just do $9^9 \mod 100$ by hand. The computation should only take a few minutes. In particular, you can compute $9^3$ and then cube that.