20th Canadian Mathematical Olympiad Problems 1988
1. For what real values of k do 1988x2 + kx + 8891 and 8891x2 + kx + 1988 have a common zero?
2. Given a triangle area A and perimeter p, let S be the set of all points a distance 5 or less from a point of the triangle. Find the area of S.
3. Given n > 4 points in the plane, some of which are colored red and the rest black. No three points of the same color are collinear. Show that we can find three points of the same color, such that two of the points do not have a point of the opposite color on the segment joining them.
4. Define two integer sequences a0, a1, a2, ... and b0, b1, b2, ... as follows. a0 = 0, a1 = 1, an+2 = 4an+1 - an, b0 = 1, b1 = 2, bn+2 = 4bn+1 - bn. Show that bn2 = 3an2 + 1.
5. If S is a sequence of positive integers let p(S) be the product of the members of S. Let m(S) be the arithmetic mean of p(T) for all non-empty subsets T of S. S' is formed from S by appending an additional positive integer. If m(S) = 13 and m(S') = 49, find S'.
Solutions
Problem 1
For what real values of k do 1988x2 + kx + 8891 and 8891x2 + kx + 1988 have a common zero?
Solution
If x is a common zero, then 1988x2 + kx + 8891 = 0, and 8891x2 + kx + 1988 = 0. Subtracting one equation from the other gives 6903(x2 - 1) = 0, so x = 1 or -1. Substituting back into the first equation gives k = ±10879. Check: for k = 10879, the polynomials are (1998x + 8891)(x + 1) and (8891x + 1998)(x + 1); or k = -10879, the polynomials are (1998x - 8891)(x - 1) and (8891x - 1998)(x - 1). In both cases, there is indeed a common zero.
Problem 2
Given a triangle area A and perimeter p, let S be the set of all points a distance 5 or less from a point of the triangle. Find the area of S.
Solution
S is the triangle itself (and all its interior points), a rectangle width 5 on each side and the sector of a circle radius 5 at each vertex to join together the two rectangles. The three sectors together form a circle. Hence the area of S is A + 5p + 25 π.
Problem 3
Given n > 4 points in the plane, some of which are colored red and the rest black. No three points of the same color are collinear. Show that we can find a three points of the same color, such that two of the points do not have a point of the opposite color on the segment joining them.
Solution
There are at least 5 points, so there must be at least 3 of the same color. Label them A1, B1, C1. If one pair does not have a point of the opposite color on the segment joining them, then we are done. If not, take the three points of the opposite color to be A2, B2, C2. Now repeat. The process must terminate because at each step we get three new points (none of the previous points can lie on the sides of AnBnCn, because all points of AnBnCn except the vertices lie inside the triangle An-1Bn-1Cn-1). So for some n An, Bn, Cn are the required points.
Problem 4
Define two integer sequences a0, a1, a2, ... and b0, b1, b2, ... as follows. a0 = 0, a1 = 1, an+2 = 4an+1 - an, b0 = 1, b1 = 2, bn+2 = 4bn+1 - bn. Show that bn2 = 3an2 + 1.
Solution
We note that a2 = 4 and b2 = 7. Let Sn be the statement that bn2 = 3an2 + 1 and bnbn-1 = 3anan-1 + 2. So S1 is true, because b12 = 4 = 3a12 + 1 and b1b0 = 2 = 3a1a0 + 2. S2 is also true, because b22 = 49 = 3a22 + 1 and b2b1 = 14 = 3a2a1 + 2.
We show that Sn is true for all n by induction. Suppose it is true for n and n-1. We have bn+1bn = bn(4bn - bn-1) = 4bn2 - bnbn-1 = 12an2 + 4 - (3anan-1 + 2) = 3an(4an - an-1) + 2 = 3anan+1 + 2, as required. Similarly, bn+12 - 3an+12 = (4bn - bn-1)2 - 3(4an - an-1)2 = 16(bn2 - 3n2 - 1) - 8(bnbn-1 - 3anan-1 - 2) + bn-12 - 3an-12 = 0 - 0 + 1, as required.
Problem 5
If S is a sequence of positive integers let p(S) be the product of the members of S. Let m(S) be the arithmetic mean of p(T) for all non-empty subsets T of S. S' is formed from S by appending an additional positive integer. If m(S) = 13 and m(S') = 49, find S'.
Solution
Suppose there are n elements in S, namely a1, a2, ... , an. Then m(S) = (K - 1)/(2n - 1), where K = (a1 + 1)(a2 + 1) ... (an + 1). If the additional integer is h, then m(S') = (K(h + 1) - 1)/(2n+1 - 1). So we have K = 13(2n - 1) + 1, (h + 1)K = 49(2n+1 - 1) + 1. Hence h + 1 = (49·2n+1 - 48)/(13·2n - 12). But 7(13·2n - 1) = 91·2n - 84 < 98.2n - 48 = 49·2n+1 - 48. For n > 3, 8(13·2n - 12) = (52·2n+1 - 96) > (49·2n+1 - 48). So we must have n = 1, 2, or 3. If n = 1, then h+1 = 148/14, which is not an integer. If n = 2, then h+1 = 344/40, which is not an integer. If n = 3, then h+1 = 736/92 = 8, which is ok.
If n = 3, then if the elements of S are a, b, c, we must have (a + 1)(b + 1)(c + 1) = 92 = 2.2.23. So S = {2, 2, 23} and S' = {2, 2, 7, 23}.
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