1993 AIME Problems/Problem 5
Problem
Let . For integers
, define
. What is the coefficient of
in
?
Solution 1
Notice that
Using the formula for the sum of the first numbers,
. Therefore,
Substituting into the function definition, we get
. We only need the coefficients of the linear terms, which we can find by the binomial theorem.
will have a linear term of
.
will have a linear term of
.
will have a linear term of
.
Adding up the coefficients, we get .
Solution 2
Notice the transformation of adds
to the roots. Thus, all these transformations will take the roots and add
to them. (Indeed, this is very easy to check in general.)
Let the roots be Then
By Vieta's/expanding/common sense, you see the coefficient of
is
Expanding yields
Using Vieta's (again) and plugging stuff in yields
Solution 3 (Overkill)
Denote the coefficient of term of polynomial
as
. We can see that
,
, and
. Note that
and
When substituting
for
in
, we get that
. Observe that
It is evident that
Define the generating function
as
By multiplying both sides of the previous recurrence relation and taking the sum of the terms
, we get that
We can perform a similar analysis on
to get the recurrence relation
Define the generating function
as
We can then perform this process again on our new recurrence relation:
Finally, we can plug
into our new explicit formula to get
This can be calculated by differentiating the generating function of the sequence 1, 1, 1, ...
and multiplying by
.
This form can be found by applying Newton's generalized binomial theorem.
This formula can be found by convolving the polynomial with the series.
- MathCactus0_0 (don't try this on a test unless you can't think of anything else!!!)
See also
1993 AIME (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
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 |
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