1983 AIME Problems/Problem 1

Revision as of 10:16, 2 August 2012 by Trident (talk | contribs) (Solution 1)

Problem

Let $x$,$y$, and $z$ all exceed $1$, and let $w$ be a positive number such that $\log_xw=24$, $\log_y w = 40$, and $\log_{xyz}w=12$. Find $\log_zw$.

Solution

Solution 1

[hide] The logarithmic notation doesn't tell us much, so we'll first convert everything to the equivalent exponential expressions.

$x^{24}=w$, $y^{40}=w$, and $(xyz)^{12}=w$. If we now convert everything to a power of $120$, it will be easy to isolate $z$ and $w$.

$x^{120}=w^5$, $y^{120}=w^3$, and $(xyz)^{120}=w^{10}$.

With some substitution, we get $w^5w^3z^{120}=w^{10}$ and $\log_zw=\boxed{060}$. [/hide]

Solution 2

Applying the change of base formula,

$\begin{align*} \log_x w = 24 &\implies \frac{\log w}{\log x} = 24 \implies \frac{\log x}{\log w} = \frac 1 {24} \\

\log_y w = 40 &\implies \frac{\log w}{\log y} = 40 \implies \frac{\log y}{\log w} = \frac 1 {40} \\

\log_{xyz} w = 12 &\implies \frac{\log {w}}{\log {xyz}} = 12 \implies \frac{\log x +\log y + \log z}{\log w} = \frac 1 {12} \end{align*}$ (Error compiling LaTeX. Unknown error_msg)

Therefore, $\frac {\log z}{\log w} = \frac 1 {12} - \frac 1 {24} - \frac 1{40} = \frac 1 {60}$.

Hence, $\log_z w = \boxed{060}$. [/hide]

See Also

1983 AIME (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
First Question
Followed by
Problem 2
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All AIME Problems and Solutions