Difference between revisions of "2018 AIME I Problems/Problem 12"
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==Solution 2== | ==Solution 2== | ||
− | Consider the numbers {1,4,7,10,13,16}. Each of those are congruent to 1mod3. There is <math>{6 \choose 0}=1</math> way to choose zero numbers <math>{6 \choose 1}=6</math> ways to choose 1 and so on. There ends up being <math>{6 \choose 0}+{6 \choose 3}+{6 \choose 6}</math> possible subsets congruent to 0mod 3. There are <math>2^6=64</math> possible subsets of these numbers. | + | Consider the numbers {1,4,7,10,13,16}. Each of those are congruent to 1mod3. There is <math>{6 \choose 0}=1</math> way to choose zero numbers <math>{6 \choose 1}=6</math> ways to choose 1 and so on. There ends up being <math>{6 \choose 0}+{6 \choose 3}+{6 \choose 6}</math> = 22 possible subsets congruent to 0mod 3. There are <math>2^6=64</math> possible subsets of these numbers. By symmetry there are 21 subsets each for 1 mod3 and 2 mod3. |
+ | We get the same numbers for the subsets of {2,5,8,11,14,17}. | ||
+ | For {3,6,9,12,15,18}, all 64 subsets are 0 mod3. | ||
==Solution 3== | ==Solution 3== |
Revision as of 11:01, 16 March 2018
Problem
For every subset of , let be the sum of the elements of , with defined to be . If is chosen at random among all subsets of , the probability that is divisible by is , where and are relatively prime positive integers. Find .
Solution 1
Rewrite the set after mod3
1 2 0 1 2 0 1 2 0 1 2 0 1 2 0 1 2 0
All 0s can be omitted
Case 1 No 1 No 2 1
Case 2 222 20
Case 3 222222 1
Case 4 12 6*6=36
Case 5 12222 6*15=90
Case 6 1122 15*15=225
Case 7 1122222 15*6=90
Case 8 111 20
Case 9 111222 20*20=400
Case 10 111222222 20
Case 11 11112 15*6=90
Case 12 11112222 15*15=225
Case 13 1111122 6*15=90
Case 14 1111122222 6*6=36
Case 15 111111 1
Case 16 111111222 20
Case 17 111111222222 1
Total 1+20+1+36+90+225+90+20+400+20+90+225+90+36+1+20+1=484+360+450+72=1366
P=1362/2^12=683/2^11
ANS=683
By S.B.
Solution 2
Consider the numbers {1,4,7,10,13,16}. Each of those are congruent to 1mod3. There is way to choose zero numbers ways to choose 1 and so on. There ends up being = 22 possible subsets congruent to 0mod 3. There are possible subsets of these numbers. By symmetry there are 21 subsets each for 1 mod3 and 2 mod3. We get the same numbers for the subsets of {2,5,8,11,14,17}. For {3,6,9,12,15,18}, all 64 subsets are 0 mod3.
Solution 3
Notice that six numbers are , six are , and six are . Having numbers will not change the remainder when is divided by , so we can choose any number of these in our subset. We ignore these for now. The number of numbers that are , minus the number of numbers that are , must be a multiple of , possibly zero or negative. We can now split into cases based on how many numbers that are are in the set.
Case 1- , , or integers: There can be , , or integers that are . We can choose these in ways.
Case 2- or integers: There can be or integers that are . We can choose these in ways.
Case 3- or integers: There can be or integers that are . We can choose these in ways.
Adding these up, we get that there are ways to choose the numbers such that their sum is a multiple of three. Putting back in the possibility that there can be multiples of in our set, we have that there are subsets with a sum that is a multiple of . Since there are total subsets, the probability is , so the answer is .
Solution 4
We use generating functions. Each element of has two choices that occur with equal probability--either it is in the set or out of the set. Therefore, given , the probability generating function is Therefore, in the generating function the coefficient of represents the probability of obtaining a sum of . We wish to find the sum of the coefficients of all terms of the form . If is a cube root of unity, then it is well know that for a polynomial , will yield the sum of the coefficients of the terms of the form . Then we find To evaluate the last two products, we utilized the facts that and . Therefore, the desired probability is Thus the answer is .
See Also
2018 AIME I (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 11 |
Followed by Problem 13 | |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 | ||
All AIME Problems and Solutions |
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