2013 AIME II Problems/Problem 14

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Problem 14

For positive integers $n$ and $k$, let $f(n, k)$ be the remainder when $n$ is divided by $k$, and for $n > 1$ let $F(n) = \max_{\substack{1\le k\le \frac{n}{2}}} f(n, k)$. Find the remainder when $\sum\limits_{n=20}^{100} F(n)$ is divided by $1000$.

Solution

Easy solution without strict proof

We can find that

$20\equiv 6 \pmod{7}$

$21\equiv 5 \pmod{8}$

$22\equiv 6 \pmod{8}$

$23\equiv 7 \pmod{8}$

$24\equiv 6 \pmod{9}$

$25\equiv 7 \pmod{9}$

$26\equiv 8 \pmod{9}$

Observing these and we can find that the reminders are in groups of three continuous integers, considering this is true, and we get

$99\equiv 31 \pmod{34}$

$100\equiv 32 \pmod{34}$

So the sum is $5+3\times(6+...+31)+32\times 2=1512$, so the answer is $\boxed{512}$.

The Proof

The solution presented above does not prove why $F(x)$ is found by dividing $x$ by $3$. Indeed, that is the case, as rigorously shown below.

Consider the case where $x = 3k$. We shall prove that $F(x) = f(x, k+1)$. For all $x/2\geq n > k+1, x = 2n + q$, where $0\leq q\leq n$. This is because $x > 3k + 3 = 3n$ and $x < n$. Also, as n increases, $q$ decreases. Thus, $q = f(x, n) < f(x, k+1) = k - 2$ for all $n > k+1$. Consider all $n < k+1. f(x, k) = 0$ and $f(x, k-1) = 3$. Also, $0 < f(x, k-2) < k-2$. Thus, for $k > 5, f(x, k+1) > f(x, n)$ for $n < k+1$.

Similar proofs apply for $x = 3k + 1$ and $x = 3k + 2$. The reader should feel free to derive these proofs himself.

Generalized Solution

$Lemma:$ Highest remainder when $n$ is divided by $1 <= k <= n/2$ is obtained for $k_0 = (n + (3 - n \pmod{3}))/3$ and the remainder thus obtained is $(n - k_0*2) = [(n - 6)/3 + (2/3)*n \pmod{3}]$.

$Note:$ This is the second highest remainder when $n$ is divided by $1<= k <= n$ and the highest remainder occurs when $n$ is divided by $k_M$ = $(n+1)/2$ for odd $n$ and $k_M$ = $(n+2)/2$ for even $n$.

Using the lemma above:

$\sum\limits_{n=20}^{100} F(n) = \sum\limits_{n=20}^{100} [(n - 6)/3 + (2/3)*n \pmod{3}]$ $= [(120*81/2)/3 - 2*81 + (2/3)*81] = 1512$

So the answer is $\boxed{512}$

Proof of Lemma: It is similar to $The Proof$ stated above.

Kris17

See Also

2013 AIME II (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 13
Followed by
Problem 15
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
All AIME Problems and Solutions

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