Difference between revisions of "2011 AIME II Problems/Problem 5"
m (→Solution 3) |
|||
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
==Solution 3== | ==Solution 3== | ||
− | The sum of the first 2011 terms of the sequence is expressible as <math>a_1 + a_1r + a_1r^2 + a_1r^3</math> .... until <math>a_1r^{2010}</math>. The sum of the 2011 terms following the first 2011 is expressible as <math>a_1r^{2011} + a_1r^{2012} + a_1r^{2013}</math> .... until <math>a_1r^{4021}</math>. Notice that the latter sum of terms can be expressed as <math>(r^{2011})(a_1 + a_1r + a_1r^2 + a_1r^3...a_1r^{2010})</math>. We also know that the latter sum of terms can be obtained by subtracting 200 from | + | The sum of the first 2011 terms of the sequence is expressible as <math>a_1 + a_1r + a_1r^2 + a_1r^3</math> .... until <math>a_1r^{2010}</math>. The sum of the 2011 terms following the first 2011 is expressible as <math>a_1r^{2011} + a_1r^{2012} + a_1r^{2013}</math> .... until <math>a_1r^{4021}</math>. Notice that the latter sum of terms can be expressed as <math>(r^{2011})(a_1 + a_1r + a_1r^2 + a_1r^3...a_1r^{2010})</math>. We also know that the latter sum of terms can be obtained by subtracting 200 from 380, which then means that <math>r^{2011} = 9/10</math>. The terms from 4023 to 6033 can be expressed as <math>(r^{4022})(a_1 + a_1r + a_1r^2 + a_1r^3...a_1r^{2010})</math>, which is equivalent to <math>((9/10)^2)(200) = 162</math>. Adding 380 and 162 gives the answer of <math>\boxed{542}</math>. |
==Video Solution== | ==Video Solution== |
Revision as of 12:41, 29 July 2022
Problem
The sum of the first terms of a geometric sequence is
. The sum of the first
terms is
. Find the sum of the first
terms.
Solution
Since the sum of the first terms is
, and the sum of the fist
terms is
, the sum of the second
terms is
.
This is decreasing from the first 2011, so the common ratio is less than one.
Because it is a geometric sequence and the sum of the first 2011 terms is , second
is
, the ratio of the second
terms to the first
terms is
. Following the same pattern, the sum of the third
terms is
.
Thus, , so the sum of the first
terms is
.
Solution 2
Solution by e_power_pi_times_i
The sum of the first terms can be written as
, and the first
terms can be written as
. Dividing these equations, we get
. Noticing that
is just the square of
, we substitute
, so
. That means that
. Since the sum of the first
terms can be written as
, dividing gives
. Since
, plugging all the values in gives
.
Solution 3
The sum of the first 2011 terms of the sequence is expressible as .... until
. The sum of the 2011 terms following the first 2011 is expressible as
.... until
. Notice that the latter sum of terms can be expressed as
. We also know that the latter sum of terms can be obtained by subtracting 200 from 380, which then means that
. The terms from 4023 to 6033 can be expressed as
, which is equivalent to
. Adding 380 and 162 gives the answer of
.
Video Solution
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rpYphKOIKRs&t=186s ~anellipticcurveoverq
See also
2011 AIME II (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 4 |
Followed by Problem 6 | |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 | ||
All AIME Problems and Solutions |
The problems on this page are copyrighted by the Mathematical Association of America's American Mathematics Competitions.