Posts

practice problems pending

Image
Use Weighted power mean inequality: WPM_m = [(w1.a1^m + w2.a2^m..... wn.an^m)/(w1 + w2 ... wn)]^(1/m) If p > q then: WPM_p >= WPM_q equality holds on a1 = a2 .... an Q1. Prove that: a^4 + b^4 + c^4 >= abc(a+b+c) given a,b,c > 0 S1. Method 1: 1 step using rearrangement inequality. Method 2: [(a^4 + b^4 + c^4)/3]^1/4 >= [(a + b + c)/3] Take power 4 on both sides: [(a^4 + b^4 + c^4)/3] >= [(a + b + c)/3]^4 = [(a + b + c)/3]^3.(a+b+c)/3 >= (abc).(a+b+c)/3 => (a^4 + b^4 + c^4) >= (abc).(a+b+c) H.P. Q2. (a, b, c, d, e) are positive real numbers such that a+b+c+d+e=8 and a^2+b^2+c^2+d^2+e^2=16. Find the range of (e). S2. a+b+c+d = 8-e a^2+b^2+c^2+d^2 = 16-e^2 => (8-e)/4 <= [(16-e^2)/4]^(1/2) => (8-e)^2/16 = (16-e^2)/4 =>5e^2 - 16e <= 0 => 0 <= e <= 16/5 = answer Q3. Find all non-zero real number triplets ((x,y,z)) satisfying 3(x^2+y^2+z^2)=1 and x^2y^2+y^2z^2+z^2x^2 = xyz,(x+y+z)^3. S3. Hint 1: prove sigma(x^2.y^2) >= xyz(x+y+z) H...

practice problems

Q1. (a, b, c) are real numbers such that a+b+c=0, and a^2+b^2+c^2=1. Find the greatest value of a^2*b^2*c^2. S1. First a wrong approach: AM GM on a^2,b^2,c^2 => (a^2 + b^2 + c^2)/3 >= (abc)^(2/3) Cube on both sides => (abc)^2 <= 1/27 And equality when a^2 = b^2 = c^2 = 1/3 a+b+c = 0 => WLOG a,b>0 and c<0 => a=b=1/sqrt(3) and c = -1/sqrt(3) but that doesn't satisfy a+b+c = 0 so this this wrong. WLOG a,b > 0 and c <0 c^2 = a^2 + b^2 + 2ab 1 = a^2 + b^2 + c^2 = a^2 + b^2 + a^2 + b^2 + 2ab = 2(a^2 + b^2 + ab) => a^2 + b^2 + ab = 1/2 AM GM on  a^2 ,b^2 ,ab => (a^2 + b^2 + ab)/3 >= ab => 1/6 >= ab => ab <= 1/6 and equality on a^2 = b^2 = 1/6 c^2 = a^2 + b^2 + 2ab = 1/2 + ab => c^2 <= 1/2 + 1/6 = 2/3 a^2*b^2*c^2 <= 1/36 * 2/3 = 1/54 = answer. Method 2: Also can be solved using vieta's and derivatives. Q2) (x, y) are positive real numbers. Prove that 4x^4 + 4y^3 + 5x^2 + y + 1 >= 12xy. S2. Using AM GM 4x^4 + 1 >= 2.2x^2...

practice problems

Q1. If b1,b2 ... .bn is a permutation of n positive real numbers a1,a2...an then find the minimum value of a1/b1 + a2/b2 ... an/bn. S1. Apply AM GM inequality to get answer = n. Q2. If a1 + a2 ... an = 1, ai > 0 for all i then find the minimum value of 1/a1 + 1/a2 ... 1/an. S2. AM >= GM >= HM HM = n/[1/a1 + 1/a2 .. 1/an] <= (a1 + a2 .. an)/n => n/X <= 1/n => X >= n^2 Q3. A,B are the A.M. and G.M. of two positive numbers a,b. Show that, B < (a-b)^2/8(A-B) < A S3. (a-b)^2 = (a+b)^2 - 4ab = (2A)^2 - (2B)^2 = 4(A^2 - B^2) So middle part becomes: 4(A-B)(A+B)/8(A-B) = (A+B)/2 B <= (A+B)/2 => B/2 <= A/2 which is correct. Similarly the other part. Q4. a,b,c,d are distinct positive real numbers in H.P. Prove that: 1) a + d > b + c 2) ad > bc S4. let 1/a = A-3D 1/b = A-D 1/c = A+D 1/d = A+3D 1/a * 1/d = A^2 - 9D^2 1/b * 1/c = A^2 - D^2 Clearly 1/ad < 1/bc since D^2 is positive and A^2 is also positive. => ad > bc Now: 1/a + 1/d = 1/b + 1/c =...

Geometry test

Image
Q1. Let ABC be a given equilateral triangle. Denote the mid-points of sides BC, CA, AB respectively by A1, B1, C1. Three distinct parallel lines p, q,r are drawn through A1, B1, C1, respectively. Line p cuts B1C1 at A2; line q cuts C1A1 at B2; line r cuts A1B1 at C2. Prove that the lines AA2, BB2, CC2 are concurrent. S1. Q2. Let (P) be any point inside triangle ABC. Let A1,A2 in AP, B1,B2 in BP, C1,C2 in CP with BA1 || AB2 || CP, CB1 || BC2 || AP, AC1 || CA2 || BP Prove that [A1B1C1] = [A2B2C2] where ([K]) denotes the area of (K). S2.  Q3. In a triangle ABC, let (AD), (BE), (CF) be the medians. Prove that AB+BC+CA <= 4/3(AD+BE+CF). When does equality hold? S3. 2z + 2y > AB 2z + 2x > AC 2x + 2y > BC Add all: 4(x+y+z) > (AB + BC + AC)____[1] LHS = 4/3(AD + BE + CF) Equality will hold for a degenerate triangle when A,B,C are colinear. For e.g. let C lie on F, then CF = 0 and centroid also lies on F. 2z = AC, 2y = BC and x = 0 So [1] becomes: 2AC + 2BC + 0 >= 2AB And ...

practice problems

Q1. How many two digit numbers have exactly 4 positive factors? (Here 1 and the number (n) are also considered as factors of (n).) S1. Only 2 possibilities: 1. p^3 where p is prime 2. p*q where p,q are prime. p^3 only one 3^3: 1 p*q we can construct 2*(5 to 47 primes): 13 3*(5 to 31): 9 5*(7 to 19): 5 7*(11 to 13): 2 Total: 30 = answer. Q2. Find the number of pairs ((a,b)) of natural numbers such that (b) is a 3-digit number, (a+1) divides (b-1), and (b) divides (a^2+a+2). S2. b-1 = k(a+1) b = k(a+1) + 1 k(a+1) + 1 divides a^2 + a +2 => ak + k + 1 divides k(a^2 + a +2) = 2k + ak + a^2.k = 2k + a(k + ak + 1 - 1) = 2k - a + a(k + ak + 1) => ak + k + 1 divides 2k - a Now 3 cases from here: 2k - a = 0 => a = 2k 2k - a > 0 => ak + k + 1 < 2k - a => a(k+1) -k + 1 < 0 => a(k+1) <= k-1 => a <= (k-1)/(k+1) which is not possible since a > 1 and RHS is < 1. 2k - a < 0 =>  ak + k + 1 < a - 2k => a(k-1) + 3k + 1 < 0 which is not possible ...

practice problems

Q1. Let X = {1,2,...,n}). In how many ways can you choose (r) elements from (X) such that no two chosen elements are consecutive, where 0 <= r <= (n+1)/2. S1. Answer: (n-r+1)c(r) Solution here. Q2. In how many ways can three numbers in arithmetic progression (A.P.) be selected from the set (1,2...n)? S2. Method 1: a,b,c in A.P. => a,c are both even or both odd. b = (a+c)/2 So if we pick 2 even or 2 odd numbers, we will find a number between them to complete the A.P. Case 1: n is even. n = 2m. m odd and m even numbers. Pick 2 even: mC2 Pick 2 odd: mC2 Total: 2 * mC2 = m(m-1) = n/2(n/2-1) = n(n-2)/4 Case 2: n = 2m+1 m+1 odd and m even numbers. Total ways: (m+1)C2 + mC2 = 1/2[m.(m+1) + m.(m-1)] = m/2[2m] = m^2 = (n-1)^2/4 Method 2: When n is even: You can pick an A.P. with d = 1 as 1,2,3 2,3,4 .... n-2,n-1,n d = 1 => n-2 ways to pick the first term d = 2 => 1,3,5 2,4,6 ... n-4,n-2,n => n-4 ways .... For e.g. n=6, max d = 2(1,3,5 2,4,6) n = 8, max d = 3(1,4,7 2,5,8) n = 1...

practice problems

Q1. Straight lines are drawn by joining (m) points on a straight line to (n) points on another line. No two lines drawn are parallel and no three lines are concurrent. How many total intersecting points are there? S1. Let's rephrase the problem as how many new intersection points are created? Solution 1: Let's create a quadrilateral by joining 2 vertices from each line. In this quadrilateral, 2 new intersection points are created. One by diagonals. And one by extending the 2 sides which we just created. Total ways to create a quadrilateral like this: Choose 2 vertices from one line and 2 from another. So, answer = 2 * mC2 * nC2 Solution 2: Total lines: mn Total intersection points: (mn)C(2) From this we need to subtract the intersection points which were already there. On each of the 'm' points, 'n' lines converge. So nC2 intersection points are made by them on a single point. In total m*nC2 such points. Similarly n*mC2 other points. So mnC2 - m*nC2 - n*mC2 = [m...