2009 AIME I Problems/Problem 13
Problem
The terms of the sequence defined by
for
are positive integers. Find the minimum possible value of
.
Solution 1
Our expression is
Manipulate this to obtain:
Our goal is to cancel terms. If we substitute in
for
we get:
Subtracting these two equations and manipulating the expression yields:
Notice we have the form
on both sides. Let
Then:
Notice that since
is always an integer,
and
must also always be an integer. It is also clear that
is a multiple of
implying a decreasing sequence.
However, if the decreasing factor is nonzero, we will eventually have a that is not an integer, contradicting our conditions for
. Thus, we need either
(impossible as
for all indices must be positive integers) or
Given this, we want to find the minimum of We have, from the problem:
By AM-GM, to minimize this, we have to make
and
factors as close as possible. Hence, the smallest possible sum is
~mathboy282
Solution 2
This question is guessable but let's prove our answer
lets put into
now
and set them equal now
let's rewrite it
Let's make it look nice and let
Since and
are integers, we can see
is divisible by
But we can't have an infinite sequence of proper factors, unless
Thus,
So now, we know
To minimize , we need
and
Thus, our answer
Solution 3
If , then either
or
All the integers between and
would be included in the sequence. However the sequence is infinite, so eventually there will be a non-integral term.
So , which
. When
,
. The smallest sum of two factors which have a product of
is
Solution 4 (BS Solution)
Essentially you see that it must be an integer for infinite numbers, which doesn't quite seem probable. The most logical explanation is that the sequence repeats, and the numbers in the sequence that repeat are integers. We list out some terms.
The terms get more and more wacky, so we just solve for
such that
and
Solving we find both equations end up to the equation in which we see to minimize we see that
and
or vice versa for an answer of
This solution is VERY non rigorous and not recommended.
See also
2009 AIME I (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 12 |
Followed by Problem 14 | |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 | ||
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