Difference between revisions of "2024 AMC 12A Problems/Problem 15"
(→Solution 4 (Reduction of power)) |
|||
Line 37: | Line 37: | ||
==Solution 4 (Reduction of power)== | ==Solution 4 (Reduction of power)== | ||
− | The motivation for this solution is the observation that <math>(p+c)(q+c)(r+c)</math> is easy to compute for any constant c, since <math>(p+c)(q+c)(r+c)=-f(-c)</math>, where <math>f</math> is the polynomial given in the problem. | + | The motivation for this solution is the observation that <math>(p+c)(q+c)(r+c)</math> is easy to compute for any constant c, since <math>(p+c)(q+c)(r+c)=-f(-c)</math>, where <math>f</math> is the polynomial given in the problem. The idea is to transform the expression involving <math>p^2, q^2, r^2</math> into one involving <math>p, q, r</math>. |
Since <math>p^3+px^2-p+3=0</math>, we get <math>p^2=\frac{p-3}{p+1}</math>. Similarly <math>q^2=\frac{q-3}{q+1}</math> and <math>r^2=\frac{r-3}{r+1}</math>. | Since <math>p^3+px^2-p+3=0</math>, we get <math>p^2=\frac{p-3}{p+1}</math>. Similarly <math>q^2=\frac{q-3}{q+1}</math> and <math>r^2=\frac{r-3}{r+1}</math>. | ||
Line 43: | Line 43: | ||
Hence, | Hence, | ||
<cmath>(p^2 + 4)(q^2 + 4)(r^2 + 4)</cmath> | <cmath>(p^2 + 4)(q^2 + 4)(r^2 + 4)</cmath> | ||
− | <cmath>=(\frac{p-3}{p+1}+4)(\frac{q-3}{q+1}+4)(\frac{r-3}{r+1}+4)</cmath> | + | <cmath>=\left(\frac{p-3}{p+1}+4\right)\left(\frac{q-3}{q+1}+4\right)\left(\frac{r-3}{r+1}+4\right)</cmath> |
− | <cmath>=(\frac{5p+1}{p+1})(\frac{5q+1}{q+1})(\frac{5r+1}{r+1})</cmath> | + | <cmath>=\left(\frac{5p+1}{p+1}\right)\left(\frac{5q+1}{q+1}\right)\left(\frac{5r+1}{r+1}\right)</cmath> |
− | <cmath>=125(\frac{p+\frac{1}{5}}{p+1})(\frac{q+\frac{1}{5}}{q+1})(\frac{r+\frac{1}{5}}{r+1})</cmath> | + | <cmath>=125\left(\frac{p+\frac{1}{5}}{p+1}\right)\left(\frac{q+\frac{1}{5}}{q+1}\right)\left(\frac{r+\frac{1}{5}}{r+1}\right)</cmath> |
<cmath>=125\frac{-f(-frac{1}{5})}{-f(-1)}</cmath> | <cmath>=125\frac{-f(-frac{1}{5})}{-f(-1)}</cmath> | ||
<cmath>=125</cmath> | <cmath>=125</cmath> |
Revision as of 20:26, 8 November 2024
Contents
Problem
The roots of are and What is the value of
Solution 1
You can factor as .
For any polynomial , you can create a new polynomial , which will have roots that instead have the value subtracted.
Substituting and into for the first polynomial, gives you and as for both equations. Multiplying and together gives you .
-ev2028
~Latex by eevee9406
Solution 2
Let . Then .
We find that and , so .
~eevee9406
Solution 3
First, denote that Then we expand the expression ~lptoggled
Solution 4 (Reduction of power)
The motivation for this solution is the observation that is easy to compute for any constant c, since , where is the polynomial given in the problem. The idea is to transform the expression involving into one involving .
Since , we get . Similarly and .
Hence,
Therefore our answer is .
~tsun26
See also
2024 AMC 12A (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | |
Preceded by Problem 14 |
Followed by Problem 16 |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 • 16 • 17 • 18 • 19 • 20 • 21 • 22 • 23 • 24 • 25 | |
All AMC 12 Problems and Solutions |
The problems on this page are copyrighted by the Mathematical Association of America's American Mathematics Competitions.