Difference between revisions of "2018 AIME I Problems/Problem 1"
m (→Solution 6(simple))  | 
				|||
| Line 93: | Line 93: | ||
Solution by Damian Kim~  | Solution by Damian Kim~  | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==Video Solution==  | ||
| + | |||
| + | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WVtbD8x9fCM https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WVtbD8x9fCM  | ||
| + | ~Shreyas S  | ||
==See Also==  | ==See Also==  | ||
{{AIME box|year=2018|n=I|before=First Problem|num-a=2}}  | {{AIME box|year=2018|n=I|before=First Problem|num-a=2}}  | ||
{{MAA Notice}}  | {{MAA Notice}}  | ||
Revision as of 16:08, 21 July 2020
Contents
Problem 1
Let 
 be the number of ordered pairs of integers 
 with 
 and 
 such that the polynomial 
 can be factored into the product of two (not necessarily distinct) linear factors with integer coefficients. Find the remainder when 
 is divided by 
.
Solution
You let the linear factors be as 
.
Then, obviously 
 and 
.
We know that 
 and 
, so 
 and 
 both have to be non-negative
However, 
 cannot be 
, so at least one of 
 and 
 must be greater than 
, ie positive.
Also, 
 cannot be greater than 
, so 
 must be less than or equal to 
.
Essentially, if we plot the solutions, we get a triangle on the coordinate plane with vertices 
 and 
. Remember that 
 does not work, so there is a square with top right corner 
.
Note that 
 and 
 are interchangeable, since they end up as 
 and 
 in the end anyways. Thus, we simply draw a line from 
 to 
, designating one of the halves as our solution (since the other side is simply the coordinates flipped).
We note that the pattern from 
 to 
 is 
 solutions and from 
 to 
 is 
 solutions, since we can decrease the 
-value by 
 until 
 for each coordinate.
Adding up gives 
This gives us 
, and 
Thus, the answer is: 
Solution 2
Similar to the previous problem, we plot the triangle and cut it in half. Then, we find the number of boundary points, which is 
, or just 
. Using Pick's theorem, we know that the area of the half-triangle, which is 
, is just 
. That means that there are 
 interior points, plus 
 boundary points, which is 
. However, 
 does not work, so the answer is 
Solution 3 (less complicated)
Notice that for 
 to be true, for every 
, 
 will always be the product of the possibilities of how to add two integers to 
. For example, if 
, 
 will be the product of 
 and 
, as those two sets are the only possibilities of adding two integers to 
. Note that order does not matter. If we just do some simple casework, we find out that: 
if 
 is odd, there will always be 
 
 possibilities of adding two integers to 
.
if 
 is even, there will always be 
 possibilities of adding two integers to 
. 
Using the casework, we have 
 possibilities. This will mean that the answer is 
 possibilities.
Thus, our solution is 
.
Solution by IronicNinja~
Solution 4
Let's write the linear factors as 
.
Then we can write them as: 
.
 or 
 has to be a positive integer as a cannot be 0.
 has to be between 
 and 
, as a cannot be over 
.
Excluding 
, we can see there is always a pair of 
 a-values for a certain amount of b-values. 
For instance, 
 and 
 both have 
 b-values. 
 and 
 both have 
 b-values.
We notice the pattern of the number of b-values in relation to the a-values:
The following link is the URL to the graph I drew showing the relationship between a-values and b-values http://artofproblemsolving.com/wiki/index.php?title=File:Screen_Shot_2018-04-30_at_8.15.00_PM.png#file
The pattern continues until 
, and in total, there are 
 pairs of a-value with the same amount of b-values. The two lone a-values without a pair are, the (
, amount of b-values=1) in the beginning, and (
, amount of b-values=51) in the end. 
Then, we add numbers from the opposite ends of the spectrum, and quickly notice that there are 
 pairs each with a sum of 
. 
 gives 
 ordered pairs:
When divided by 
, it gives the remainder 
, the answer.
Solution provided by- Yonglao
Solution 5
Let's say that the quadratic 
 can be factored into 
 where 
 and 
 are non-negative numbers. We can't have both of them zero because 
 would not be within bounds. Also, 
. Assume that 
. 
 can be written as 
 where 
. Therefore, 
. To find the amount of ordered pairs, we must consider how many values of 
 are possible for each value of 
. The amount of possible values of 
 is given by 
. The 
 is the case where 
. We don't include the case where 
, so we must subtract a case from our total. The amount of ordered pairs of 
 is:
This is an arithmetic progression. 
 
When divided by 
, it gives the remainder 
~Zeric Hang
Solution 6(simple)
By Vietas, the sum of the roots is 
 and the product is 
. Therefore, both roots are nonpositive. For each value of 
 from 
 to 
, the number of 
 values is the number of ways to sum two numbers between 
 and 
 inclusive to 
. This is just 
. Thus, the answer is 
-bron jiang
Solution 7 (less room for error)
Similar to solution 1 we plot the triangle and half it. From dividing the triangle in half we are removing the other half of answers that are just flipped coordinates. We notice that we can measure the length of the longest side of the half triangle which is just from 
 to 
, so the number of points on that line is is 
. The next row has length 
, the one after that has length 
, and so on. We simply add this arithmetic series of odd integers 
. 
This is 
 
Or you can notice that this is the sum of the first 
 odd terms, which is just 
.
However, 
 is the singular coordinate that does not work, so the answer is 
Solution by Damian Kim~
Video Solution
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WVtbD8x9fCM https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WVtbD8x9fCM ~Shreyas S
See Also
| 2018 AIME I (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
| Preceded by First Problem  | 
Followed by Problem 2  | |
| 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 | ||
| All AIME Problems and Solutions | ||
These problems are copyrighted © by the Mathematical Association of America, as part of the American Mathematics Competitions.