2019 IMO Problems/Problem 1
Contents
Problem
Let be the set of integers. Determine all functions
such that, for all
integers
and
,
Solution 1
Let us substitute in for
to get
Now, since the domain and range of are the same, we can let
and
equal some constant
to get
Therefore, we have found that all solutions must be of the form
Plugging back into the original equation, we have: which is true. Therefore, we know that
satisfies the above for any integral constant c, and that this family of equations is unique.
(This solution does not work though because we don't know that is surjective)
Solution 2
We plug in and
to get
respectively.
Setting them equal to each other, we have the equation and moving "like terms" to one side of the equation yields
Seeing that this is a difference of outputs of
we can relate this to slope by dividing by
on both sides. This gives us
which means that
is linear. (Functional equations don't work like that unfortunately)
Let Plugging our expression into our original equation yields
and letting
be constant, this can only be true if
If
then
which implies
However, the output is then not all integers, so this doesn't work. If
we have
Plugging this in works, so the answer is
for some integer
Solution 3:
The only solutions are For some integer
Obviously these work. We prove these are the only linear solutions. Plug and
separately to get that
Plug
to see
and subtracting
from both sides shows
to be additive thus linear by Cauchy since this is on integers. Thus,
is linear, and so we are done since it can be easily shown that
and
are the only linear solutions by plugging
into the equation.
Solution 4: This works as well
We claim the only solutions are and
for some integer
., which obviously work. Plugging in
and
give
, so
. Since this difference is constant and
, we must have
is linear (finite differences or induction). It is easy to see the only linear solutions are those specified above.
~ Ezra Guerrero
Solution 5
We just plug values to find basic properties of the function.
If ,
We know that
is constantand we can see that
is not constant (because it varies depends on the value of b), so let
be a variable. This means we are making this a function of f(b). This yields that
. This is a linear function (in terms of f(b))! However, we are not done yet. We have to show that this works. When
and plugging in our function yields:
and the last part is indeed true so we are good. Don’t forget the 0 function this works also. Let us verify that the 0 function works. This means
, which is true and a so called “trivial” solution. Now let us prove this rigorously. Take
when they equal
and
(I chose it that way since they are 1 apart from each other; Really you could have chosen
and
and that would work). We will show that this is linear or below. Substitute in the equations for both yields
Equating and then subtracting yields
. From this equation how do we know this is linear? Well treat the f(x) and f(x-1) like variables and dividing by two we can see that
is constant since -1 and 0 are fixed values. And since the difference is constant and
and
are one apart this tells you that it is a linear function as the difference is constant, i.e 5x+4 is linear since the first positive x’s yields are 4, 9, 14… and we can see the difference is the same. Therefore we proved that the functions we said are good.
Side note: I am referring to the linear function where
and the constant function which is
.
~EaZ_Shadow
See Also
2019 IMO (Problems) • Resources | ||
Preceded by First Problem |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 | Followed by Problem 2 |
All IMO Problems and Solutions |