Difference between revisions of "2007 AIME II Problems/Problem 14"

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(Solution 2)
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Comment:
 
The answer is clearly correct, but the proof has a gap, i.e. there is no reason that <math>f(-2)\neq1</math>.  Since <math>f(x)</math> has no real roots, the degree must be even.  Consider <math>g(x)= f(x)/f(-x)</math>.  Then since <math>f</math> is non-zero, <math>g(x)=g(2x^3+x)</math>. Now the function <math>2x^3+x</math> applied repeatedly from some real starting value of x becomes arbitrarily large, and the limit of <math>g(x)</math> as <math>|x|</math> approaches infinity is 1, so <math>g(x)</math>=1 for all x, or <math>f(x)=f(-x)</math>.  Then <math>f(x)=h(x^2+1)</math> for some polynomial <math>h(x)</math>, and <math>h(x^2+1)h(4x^4+1)=h(4x^6+4x^4+x^2+1) = h((x^2+1)(4x^4+1))</math>.  Now suppose h has degree m.  It is clearly monic.  Assume that the next highest non-zero coefficient in h is k.  Then, subtracting <math>((x^2+1)(4x^4+1))^m</math> from both sides of the equation yields a polynomial equality with degree <math>4m+2k</math> on the left and degree <math>6k</math> on the right, a contradiction.  So <math>h(x)=x^m</math>, and <math>f(x)=(1+x^2)^m</math>.
 
The answer is clearly correct, but the proof has a gap, i.e. there is no reason that <math>f(-2)\neq1</math>.  Since <math>f(x)</math> has no real roots, the degree must be even.  Consider <math>g(x)= f(x)/f(-x)</math>.  Then since <math>f</math> is non-zero, <math>g(x)=g(2x^3+x)</math>. Now the function <math>2x^3+x</math> applied repeatedly from some real starting value of x becomes arbitrarily large, and the limit of <math>g(x)</math> as <math>|x|</math> approaches infinity is 1, so <math>g(x)</math>=1 for all x, or <math>f(x)=f(-x)</math>.  Then <math>f(x)=h(x^2+1)</math> for some polynomial <math>h(x)</math>, and <math>h(x^2+1)h(4x^4+1)=h(4x^6+4x^4+x^2+1) = h((x^2+1)(4x^4+1))</math>.  Now suppose h has degree m.  It is clearly monic.  Assume that the next highest non-zero coefficient in h is k.  Then, subtracting <math>((x^2+1)(4x^4+1))^m</math> from both sides of the equation yields a polynomial equality with degree <math>4m+2k</math> on the left and degree <math>6k</math> on the right, a contradiction.  So <math>h(x)=x^m</math>, and <math>f(x)=(1+x^2)^m</math>.
 
== Solution 2 ==
 
Let <math>x</math> be <math>\frac{i}{\sqrt{2}}</math>
 
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==

Revision as of 00:55, 26 November 2020

Problem

Let $f(x)$ be a polynomial with real coefficients such that $f(0) = 1,$ $f(2)+f(3)=125,$ and for all $x$, $f(x)f(2x^{2})=f(2x^{3}+x).$ Find $f(5).$

Solution

Let $r$ be a root of $f(x)$. Then we have $f(r)f(2r^2)=f(2r^3+r)$; since $r$ is a root, we have $f(r)=0$; therefore $2r^3+r$ is also a root. Thus, if $r$ is real and non-zero, $|2r^3+r|>r$, so $f(x)$ has infinitely many roots. Since $f(x)$ is a polynomial (thus of finite degree) and $f(0)$ is nonzero, $f(x)$ has no real roots.

Note that $f(x)$ is not constant. We then find two complex roots: $r = \pm i$. We find that $f(i)f(-2) = f(-i)$, and that $f(-i)f(-2) = f(i)$. This means that $f(i)f(-i)f(-2)^2 = f(i)f(-i) \Longrightarrow f(i)f(-i)(f(-2)^2 - 1) = 0$. Thus, $\pm i$ are roots of the polynomial, and so $(x - i)(x + i) = x^2 + 1$ will be a factor of the polynomial. (Note: This requires the assumption that $f(-2)\neq1$. Clearly, $f(-2)\neq-1$, because that would imply the existence of a real root.)

The polynomial is thus in the form of $f(x) = (x^2 + 1)g(x)$. Substituting into the given expression, we have

\[(x^2+1)g(x)(4x^4+1)g(2x^2)=((2x^3+x)^2+1)g(2x^3+x)\] \[(4x^6+4x^4+x^2+1)g(x)g(2x^2)=(4x^6+4x^4+x^2+1)g(2x^3+x)\]

Thus either $4x^6+4x^4+x^2+1=(4x^4+1)(x^2+1)$ is 0 for any $x$, or $g(x)$ satisfies the same constraints as $f(x)$. Continuing, by infinite descent, $f(x) = (x^2 + 1)^n$ for some $n$.

Since $f(2)+f(3)=125=5^n+10^n$ for some $n$, we have $n=2$; so $f(5) = \boxed{676}$.


Comment: The answer is clearly correct, but the proof has a gap, i.e. there is no reason that $f(-2)\neq1$. Since $f(x)$ has no real roots, the degree must be even. Consider $g(x)= f(x)/f(-x)$. Then since $f$ is non-zero, $g(x)=g(2x^3+x)$. Now the function $2x^3+x$ applied repeatedly from some real starting value of x becomes arbitrarily large, and the limit of $g(x)$ as $|x|$ approaches infinity is 1, so $g(x)$=1 for all x, or $f(x)=f(-x)$. Then $f(x)=h(x^2+1)$ for some polynomial $h(x)$, and $h(x^2+1)h(4x^4+1)=h(4x^6+4x^4+x^2+1) = h((x^2+1)(4x^4+1))$. Now suppose h has degree m. It is clearly monic. Assume that the next highest non-zero coefficient in h is k. Then, subtracting $((x^2+1)(4x^4+1))^m$ from both sides of the equation yields a polynomial equality with degree $4m+2k$ on the left and degree $6k$ on the right, a contradiction. So $h(x)=x^m$, and $f(x)=(1+x^2)^m$.

See also

2007 AIME II (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 13
Followed by
Problem 15
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
All AIME Problems and Solutions

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