1998 AIME Problems/Problem 5

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Problem

Given that $A_k = \frac {k(k - 1)}2\cos\frac {k(k - 1)\pi}2,$ find $|A_{19} + A_{20} + \cdots + A_{98}|.$

Solution

Though the problem may appear to be quite daunting, it is actually not that difficult. $\displaystyle \frac {k(k-1)}2$ always evaluates to an integer (triangular number), and the cosine of $\displaystyle n\pi$ where $n \in \mathbb{Z}$ is 1 if $\displaystyle n$ is even and -1 if $\displaystyle n$ is odd. $\displaystyle \frac {k(k-1)}2$ will be even if $\displaystyle 4|k$ or $\displaystyle 4|k-1$, and odd otherwise.

So our sum looks something like:

$|\sum_{i=19}^{98} A_i| = \displaystyle - \frac{19(18)}{2} + \frac{20(19)}{2} + \frac{21(20)}{2} - \frac{22(21)}{2} \cdots - \frac{98(97)}{2}$

If we group the terms in pairs, we see that we need a formula for $\frac{n(n-1)}{2} + \frac{n+1(n)}{2} = \left(\frac n2\right)(n+1 - (n-1)) = n$. So the first two fractions add up to 19, the next two to $-21$, and so forth.

If we pair the terms again now, each pair adds up to $-2$. There are $\frac{98-19+1}{2 \cdot 2} = 20$ such pairs, so our answer is $|-2 \cdot 20| = 040$.

See also

1998 AIME (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 4
Followed by
Problem 6
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
All AIME Problems and Solutions