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Problem F
Circle Bounce

You are standing by the wall in a large, perfectly circular arena and you throw a tennis ball hard against some other part of the arena. After a given number of bounces, where does the tennis ball next strike the wall?

Map the arena as a unit circle centered at the origin, with you standing at the point $(-1, 0)$. You throw the ball with a direction given by a slope in the coordinate plane of a rational fraction $a/b$. Each bounce is perfect, losing no energy and bouncing from the wall with the same angle of reflection as the angle of incidence to a tangent to the wall at the point of impact.

\includegraphics[width=0.5\textwidth ]{circle.pdf}

After $n$ bounces, the ball strikes the circle again at some point $p$ which has rational coordinates that can be expressed as $(r/s, t/u)$. Output the fraction $r/s$ modulo the prime $M = 1{,}000{,}000{,}007$.

It can be shown that the $x$ coordinate can be expressed as an irreducible fraction $r/s$, where $r$ and $s$ are integers and $s \not\equiv 0 \pmod M$. Output the integer equal to $r\cdot s^{-1} \pmod M$. In other words, output an integer $k$ such that $0 \le k < M$ and $k\cdot s \equiv r \pmod M$.

For example, if we throw the ball with slope $1/2$ and it bounces once, it first strikes the wall at coordinates $(3/5, 4/5)$. After bouncing, it next strikes the wall at coordinates $(7/25, -24/25)$. The modular inverse of $25$ with respect to the prime $M$ is $280{,}000{,}002$, and the final result is thus $7\cdot 280{,}000{,}002 \pmod M = 960{,}000{,}007$.

Input

The single line of input will contain three integers $a$, $b$ ($1 \le a,b \le 10^9, \gcd (a,b)=1$) and $n$ ($1 \le n \le 10^{12}$), where $a/b$ is the slope of your throw, and $n$ is the number of bounces. Note that $a$ and $b$ are relatively prime.

Output

Output a single integer value as described above.

Note that Sample 2 corresponds to the example in the problem description.

Sample Input 1 Sample Output 1
1 1 3
1000000006
Sample Input 2 Sample Output 2
1 2 1
960000007
Sample Input 3 Sample Output 3
11 63 44
22
Sample Input 4 Sample Output 4
163 713 980
0

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