2021 Fall AMC 10A Problems/Problem 25
Problem
A quadratic polynomial with real coefficients and leading coefficient is called
if the equation
is satisfied by exactly three real numbers. Among all the disrespectful quadratic polynomials, there is a unique such polynomial
for which the sum of the roots is maximized. What is
?
Solution 1
Let and
be the roots of
. Then,
. The solutions to
is the union of the solutions to
and
. It follows that one of these two quadratics has one solution (a double root) and the other has two. WLOG, assume that the quadratic with one root is
. Then, the discriminant is
, so
. Thus,
, but for
to have two solutions, it must be the case that
. (This can be shown by checking the sign of the discriminant of
.) It follows that the sum of the roots of
is
, whose maximum value occurs when
. Solving for
yields
. Therefore,
, so
.
~ Leo.Euler
Solution 2 (Factored form)
The disrespectful function has leading coefficient 1, so it can be written in factored form as
. Now the problem states that all
must satisfy
. Plugging our form in, we get:
.
The roots of this equation are
. By the fundamental theorem of algebra, each root must have two roots for a total of four possible values of x yet the problem states that this equation is satisfied by three values of x. Therefore one equation must give a double root. Without loss of generality, let the equation
be the equation that produces the double root. Expanding gives
. We know that if there is a double root to this equation, the discriminant must be equal to zero, so
.
Solution in progress
~KingRavi