2000 AMC 10 Problems/Problem 20
Problem
Let ,
, and
be nonnegative integers such that
. What is the maximum value of
?
Solution 1
The trick is to realize that the sum is similar to the product
. If we multiply
, we get
We know that
, therefore
and
Now consider the maximal value of this expression. Suppose that some two of
,
, and
differ by at least
. Then this triple
is not optimal. (To see this, WLOG let
We can then increase the value of
by changing
and
.)
Therefore the maximum is achieved when is a rotation of
. The value of
in this case is
and thus the maximum of
is
Solution 2
Notice that if we want to maximize , we want A, M, and C to be as close as possible. For example, if
and
then the expression would have a much smaller value than if we were to substitute
, and
. So to make A, B, and C as close together as possible, we divide
to get
. Therefore, A must be 3, B must be 3, and C must be 4.
. So the answer is
Solution 3
Lemma: If is an answer choice on an AMC, then it must be the answer.
This lemma is very difficult to prove and has been thoroughly analyzed by quantum computing to show it is always true.
Since
is an answer choice on this problem, by this lemma, it is the correct answer
-Trex
Video Solution
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vdou0LpTlzY&t=22s
See Also
2000 AMC 10 (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 19 |
Followed by Problem 21 | |
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