Difference between revisions of "1974 USAMO Problems/Problem 2"

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J.Z.
 
J.Z.
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==Solution 6==
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Cubing both sides of the given inequality gives <cmath>a^{3a}b^{3b}c^{3c}\ge(abc)^{a+b+c}</cmath>
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If we take <math>a^{3a}b^{3b}c^{3c}</math> as the product of <math>3a</math> <math>a</math>'s, <math>3b</math> <math>b</math>'s, and <math>3c</math> <math>c's</math>, we get that
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<center>
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<math>\sqrt[3(a+b+c)]{a^{3a}b^{3b}c^{3c}}\ge\frac{3(a+b+c)}{\frac{3a}{a}+\frac{3b}{b}+\frac{3c}{c}}=\frac{a+b+c}{3}\ge\sqrt[3]{abc}</math>
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</center>
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by GM-HM, as desired.
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==Solution 7==
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Replacing <math>a</math> with <math>ak</math>, <math>b</math> with <math>bk</math>, and <math>c</math> with <math>ck</math>, for some positive real <math>k</math> we get:
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<math>a^{ak}k^{ak}b^{bk}k^{bk}c^{ck}k^{ck} = a^{ak}b^{bk}c^{ck}k^{ak+bk+ck} \ge {k^3abc}^{{ak+bk+ck}/3} = k^{ak+bk+ck}{abc}^{{ak+bk+ck}/3}</math>
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This means that this inequality is homogeneous since both sides have the same power of <math>k</math> as a factor. Since the inequality is homogeneous, we can scale <math>abc</math> so that their product is <math>1</math>, i.e. <math>abc = 1</math>. This makes the inequality turn into something much more nicer to deal with. Now we have to prove:
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<math>a^ab^bc^c \ge 1</math> given that <math>abc = 1</math>.
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Note that <math>a^a \ge a</math> even if <math>a \le 1</math>. Therefore <math>a^a \ge a</math>, <math>b^b \ge b</math>, and <math>c^c \ge c</math>. Multiplying these together we get:
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<math>a^ab^bc^c \ge abc = 1</math>. This proves the desired result. Equality holds when <math>a = b = c = 1</math>.
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==Solution 8 (Rearrangement)==
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Let <math>\log_2a=x</math>, <math>\log_2b=y</math> and <math>\log_2c=z</math>, and WLOG <math>a\ge b\ge c >0</math>.
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Then we have both <math>a\ge b\ge c</math> and <math>x\ge y \ge z</math>.
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By the rearrangement inequality,
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<math>ax+by+cz\ge ay + bz +cx</math> and
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<math>ax+by +cz\ge az+bx+cy</math>.
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Summing,
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<math>2(ax+by+cz)\ge a(y+z)+b(x+z)+c(x+y)</math>
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Adding <math>ax+by+cz</math>,we get
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<math>ax+by+cz\ge \frac{(a+b+c)(x+y+z)}{3}</math>.
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Now we substitute back for <math>x,y,z</math> to get:
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<math>\log_2a^ab^bc^c\ge \log_2(abc)^{\frac{a+b+c}{3}}</math>.
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Raising <math>2</math> to the power of each side, we get
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<math>a^ab^bc^c\ge (abc)^{\frac{a+b+c}{3}}</math>
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==Solution 9==
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Assume without loss of generality that <math>a\le b\le c</math>. Then, we have
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<cmath>b/a\ge 1, c/a\ge 1, c/b\ge 1, b-a\ge 0, c-a\ge 0, c-b\ge 0.</cmath>
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It follows that
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<cmath>(b/a)^{(b-a)/3}\cdot (c/a)^{(c-a)/3}\cdot (c/b)^{(c-b)/3}\ge 1.</cmath>
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We can "distribute" the exponents, which gives
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<cmath>\dfrac{b^{(b-a)/3}}{a^{(b-a)/3}}\cdot \dfrac{c^{(c-a)/3}}{a^{(c-a)/3}}\cdot \dfrac{c^{(c-b)/3}}{b^{(c-b)/3}}\ge 1.</cmath>
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Notice that in the <math>b^{(c-b)/3}</math> in the denominator of the third fraction can be brought out of the denominator by negating its exponent. This gives
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<cmath>\dfrac{b^{(b-a)/3}}{a^{(b-a)/3}}\cdot \dfrac{c^{(c-a)/3}}{a^{(c-a)/3}}\cdot c^{(c-b)/3} \cdot b^{(b-c)/3}\ge 1.</cmath>
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We can move around terms on the left to get
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<cmath>\left(\dfrac{b^{(b-a)/3}\cdot b^{(b-c)/3}}{a^{(b-a)/3}}\right)\left(\dfrac{c^{(c-a)/3}\cdot c^{(c-b)/3}}{a^{(c-a)/3}}\right)\ge 1.</cmath>
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Now we combine the exponents in the numerators. This gives
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<cmath>\left(\dfrac{b^{(2b-c-a)/3}}{a^{(b-a)/3}}\right)\left(\dfrac{c^{(2c-b-a)/3}}{a^{(c-a)/3}}\right)\ge 1.</cmath>
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We multiply both sides by <math>\left(a^{(b-a)/3}\right)\left(a^{(c-a)/3}\right),</math> which gives
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<cmath>\left(b^{(2b-c-a)/3}\right)\left(c^{(2c-b-a)/3}\right)\ge \left(a^{(b-a)/3}\right)\left(a^{(c-a)/3}\right).</cmath>
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We then multiply both sides by <math>\left(b^{(c-a)/3}\right)\left(c^{(b-a)/3}\right):</math>
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<cmath>\left(b^{(2b-2a)/3}\right)\left(c^{(2c-2a)/3}\right)\ge \left(a^{(b-a)/3}\right)\left(c^{(b-a)/3}\right)\left(a^{(c-a)/3}\right)\left(b^{(c-a)/3}\right).</cmath>
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Multiplying both sides by <math>\left(b^{(b-a)/3}\right)\left(c^{(c-a)/3}\right),</math> then simplifying both sides with exponent laws, gives
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<cmath>b^{b-a}\cdot c^{c-a}\ge (abc)^{(b+c-2a)/3}.</cmath>
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Finally, we multiply both sides by <math>(abc)^a.</math> Combining exponents one last time gives the desired
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<cmath>a^a b^b c^c\ge (abc)^{(a+b+c)/3}.</cmath>
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--MenuThreeOne
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==Video Solution: Only basic rules of exponents are needed==
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https://youtu.be/lXmUugsPb1U?si=JAp8PJ5DxnULtUTB
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{{alternate solutions}}
 
{{alternate solutions}}

Latest revision as of 09:20, 24 August 2024

Problem

Prove that if $a$, $b$, and $c$ are positive real numbers, then

$a^ab^bc^c\ge (abc)^{(a+b+c)/3}$

Solution 1

Consider the function $f(x)=x\ln{x}$. $f''(x)=\frac{1}{x}>0$ for $x>0$; therefore, it is a convex function and we can apply Jensen's Inequality:

$\frac{a\ln{a}+b\ln{b}+c\ln{c}}{3}\ge \left(\frac{a+b+c}{3}\right)\ln\left(\frac{a+b+c}{3}\right)$

Apply AM-GM to get

$\frac{a+b+c}{3}\ge \sqrt[3]{abc}$

which implies

$\frac{a\ln{a}+b\ln{b}+c\ln{c}}{3}\ge \left(\frac{a+b+c}{3}\right)\ln\left(\sqrt[3]{abc}\right)$

Rearranging,

$a\ln{a}+b\ln{b}+c\ln{c}\ge\left(\frac{a+b+c}{3}\right)\ln\left(abc\right)$

Because $f(x) = e^x$ is an increasing function, we can conclude that:

$e^{a\ln{a}+b\ln{b}+c\ln{c}}\ge{e}^{\ln\left(abc\right)(a+b+c)/3}$

which simplifies to the desired inequality.

Solution 2

Note that $(a^ab^bc^c)(a^bb^cc^a)(a^cb^ac^b)=\left((abc)^{(a+b+c)/3}\right)^3$.

So if we can prove that $a^ab^bc^c\ge a^bb^cc^a$ and $a^ab^bc^c\ge a^cb^ac^b$, then we are done.

WLOG let $a\ge b\ge c$.

Note that $(a^ab^bc^c)\cdot \left(\dfrac{c}{a}\right)^{a-b}\cdot \left(\dfrac{c}{b}\right)^{b-c}=a^bb^cc^a$. Since $\dfrac{c}{a} \le  1$, $\dfrac{c}{b} \le  1$, $a-b \ge 0$, and $b-c \ge 0$, it follows that $a^ab^bc^c \ge a^bb^cc^a$.

Note that $(a^ab^bc^c)\cdot \left(\dfrac{b}{a}\right)^{a-b}\cdot \left(\dfrac{c}{a}\right)^{b-c}=a^cb^ac^b$. Since $\dfrac{b}{a} \le  1$, $\dfrac{c}{a} \le  1$, $a-b \ge 0$, and $b-c \ge 0$, it follows that $a^ab^bc^c \ge a^cb^ac^b$.

Thus, $(a^ab^bc^c)^3\ge (a^ab^bc^c)(a^bb^cc^a)(a^cb^ac^b)=\left((abc)^{(a+b+c)/3}\right)^3$, and cube-rooting both sides gives $a^ab^bc^c\ge (abc)^{(a+b+c)/3}$ as desired.

Solution 3

WLOG let $a\ge b\ge c$. Let $b = ax$ and $c = ay$, where $x \ge 1$ and $y \ge 1$.

We want to prove that $(a)^{a}(ax)^{ax}(ay)^{ay} \ge (a \cdot ax \cdot ay)^{\frac{a + ax + ay}{3}}$.

Simplifying and combining terms on each side, we get $a^{a + ax + ay}x^{ax}y^{ay} \ge a^{a + ax + ay}(xy)^{\frac{a + ax + ay}{3}}$.

Since $a > 0$, we can divide out $a^{a + ax + ay}$ to get $x^{ax}y^{ay} \ge (xy)^{\frac{a + ax + ay}{3}}$.

Take the $a$th root of each side and then cube both sides to get $x^{3x}y^{3y} \ge (xy)^{1 + x + y}$.

This simplifies to $x^{2x-1}y^{2y-1} \ge x^{y}y^{x}$.

Since $2x - 1 \ge x$ and $2y - 1 \ge y$, we only need to prove $x^{x}y^{y} \ge x^{y}y^{x}$ for our given $x, y$.

WLOG, let $y \ge x$ and $y =kx$ for $k \ge 1$. Then our expression becomes

$x^{x}(xk)^{xk} \ge x^{xk}(xk)^{x}$

$x^{x+xk}k^{xk} \ge x^{x+xk}k^{x}$

$k^{xk} \ge k^{x}$

$k^k \ge k$

This is clearly true for $k \ge 1$.

Solution 4

WLOG let $a\ge b\ge c$. Then sequence $(a,b,c)$ majorizes $(\frac{a+b+c}{3},\frac{a+b+c}{3},\frac{a+b+c}{3})$. Thus by Muirhead's Inequality, we have $\sum_{sym} a^ab^bc^c \ge \sum_{sym} a^{\frac{a+b+c}{3}}b^{\frac{a+b+c}{3}}c^{\frac{a+b+c}{3}}$, so $a^ab^bc^c \ge (abc)^{\frac{a+b+c}{3}}$.

Solution 5

Let $x=\frac{a}{\sqrt[3]{abc}},$ $y=\frac{b}{\sqrt[3]{abc}}$ and $z=\frac{c}{\sqrt[3]{abc}}.$ Then $xyz=1$ and a straightforward calculation reduces the problem to \[x^xy^yz^z \ge 1.\] WLOG, assume $x\ge y\ge z.$ Then $x\ge 1,$ $z\le 1$ and $xy=\frac{1}{z} \ge 1.$ Therefore, \[x^xy^yz^z=x^{x-y}(xy)^{y-z}(xyz)^z \ge 1.\]

J.Z.

Solution 6

Cubing both sides of the given inequality gives \[a^{3a}b^{3b}c^{3c}\ge(abc)^{a+b+c}\] If we take $a^{3a}b^{3b}c^{3c}$ as the product of $3a$ $a$'s, $3b$ $b$'s, and $3c$ $c's$, we get that

$\sqrt[3(a+b+c)]{a^{3a}b^{3b}c^{3c}}\ge\frac{3(a+b+c)}{\frac{3a}{a}+\frac{3b}{b}+\frac{3c}{c}}=\frac{a+b+c}{3}\ge\sqrt[3]{abc}$

by GM-HM, as desired.

Solution 7

Replacing $a$ with $ak$, $b$ with $bk$, and $c$ with $ck$, for some positive real $k$ we get: $a^{ak}k^{ak}b^{bk}k^{bk}c^{ck}k^{ck} = a^{ak}b^{bk}c^{ck}k^{ak+bk+ck} \ge {k^3abc}^{{ak+bk+ck}/3} = k^{ak+bk+ck}{abc}^{{ak+bk+ck}/3}$ This means that this inequality is homogeneous since both sides have the same power of $k$ as a factor. Since the inequality is homogeneous, we can scale $abc$ so that their product is $1$, i.e. $abc = 1$. This makes the inequality turn into something much more nicer to deal with. Now we have to prove: $a^ab^bc^c \ge 1$ given that $abc = 1$. Note that $a^a \ge a$ even if $a \le 1$. Therefore $a^a \ge a$, $b^b \ge b$, and $c^c \ge c$. Multiplying these together we get: $a^ab^bc^c \ge abc = 1$. This proves the desired result. Equality holds when $a = b = c = 1$.

Solution 8 (Rearrangement)

Let $\log_2a=x$, $\log_2b=y$ and $\log_2c=z$, and WLOG $a\ge b\ge c >0$. Then we have both $a\ge b\ge c$ and $x\ge y \ge z$. By the rearrangement inequality, $ax+by+cz\ge ay + bz +cx$ and $ax+by +cz\ge az+bx+cy$. Summing, $2(ax+by+cz)\ge a(y+z)+b(x+z)+c(x+y)$ Adding $ax+by+cz$,we get $ax+by+cz\ge \frac{(a+b+c)(x+y+z)}{3}$. Now we substitute back for $x,y,z$ to get: $\log_2a^ab^bc^c\ge \log_2(abc)^{\frac{a+b+c}{3}}$. Raising $2$ to the power of each side, we get $a^ab^bc^c\ge (abc)^{\frac{a+b+c}{3}}$

Solution 9

Assume without loss of generality that $a\le b\le c$. Then, we have \[b/a\ge 1, c/a\ge 1, c/b\ge 1, b-a\ge 0, c-a\ge 0, c-b\ge 0.\] It follows that \[(b/a)^{(b-a)/3}\cdot (c/a)^{(c-a)/3}\cdot (c/b)^{(c-b)/3}\ge 1.\] We can "distribute" the exponents, which gives \[\dfrac{b^{(b-a)/3}}{a^{(b-a)/3}}\cdot \dfrac{c^{(c-a)/3}}{a^{(c-a)/3}}\cdot \dfrac{c^{(c-b)/3}}{b^{(c-b)/3}}\ge 1.\] Notice that in the $b^{(c-b)/3}$ in the denominator of the third fraction can be brought out of the denominator by negating its exponent. This gives \[\dfrac{b^{(b-a)/3}}{a^{(b-a)/3}}\cdot \dfrac{c^{(c-a)/3}}{a^{(c-a)/3}}\cdot c^{(c-b)/3} \cdot b^{(b-c)/3}\ge 1.\] We can move around terms on the left to get \[\left(\dfrac{b^{(b-a)/3}\cdot b^{(b-c)/3}}{a^{(b-a)/3}}\right)\left(\dfrac{c^{(c-a)/3}\cdot c^{(c-b)/3}}{a^{(c-a)/3}}\right)\ge 1.\] Now we combine the exponents in the numerators. This gives \[\left(\dfrac{b^{(2b-c-a)/3}}{a^{(b-a)/3}}\right)\left(\dfrac{c^{(2c-b-a)/3}}{a^{(c-a)/3}}\right)\ge 1.\] We multiply both sides by $\left(a^{(b-a)/3}\right)\left(a^{(c-a)/3}\right),$ which gives \[\left(b^{(2b-c-a)/3}\right)\left(c^{(2c-b-a)/3}\right)\ge \left(a^{(b-a)/3}\right)\left(a^{(c-a)/3}\right).\] We then multiply both sides by $\left(b^{(c-a)/3}\right)\left(c^{(b-a)/3}\right):$ \[\left(b^{(2b-2a)/3}\right)\left(c^{(2c-2a)/3}\right)\ge \left(a^{(b-a)/3}\right)\left(c^{(b-a)/3}\right)\left(a^{(c-a)/3}\right)\left(b^{(c-a)/3}\right).\] Multiplying both sides by $\left(b^{(b-a)/3}\right)\left(c^{(c-a)/3}\right),$ then simplifying both sides with exponent laws, gives \[b^{b-a}\cdot c^{c-a}\ge (abc)^{(b+c-2a)/3}.\] Finally, we multiply both sides by $(abc)^a.$ Combining exponents one last time gives the desired \[a^a b^b c^c\ge (abc)^{(a+b+c)/3}.\] --MenuThreeOne

Video Solution: Only basic rules of exponents are needed

https://youtu.be/lXmUugsPb1U?si=JAp8PJ5DxnULtUTB


Alternate solutions are always welcome. If you have a different, elegant solution to this problem, please add it to this page.

See Also

1974 USAMO (ProblemsResources)
Preceded by
Problem 1
Followed by
Problem 3
1 2 3 4 5
All USAMO Problems and Solutions

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