4u Mathematics Marathon V 1.0 (1 Viewer)

EmmR

Vegetarian Noodles!!!
Joined
Mar 31, 2005
Messages
22
Location
bankstown
Gender
Female
HSC
2006
Back in 2005 there was some form of question numbering system but it seemed to dissapear at Q4.

what question number are you guys up to? Q76?


So whats the next question?
 
P

pLuvia

Guest
LottoX said:
Q: If In = ∫01(1-x2)n dx, find In in terms of In-1 and n.
int.{0 to 1}(1-x2)n dx
Let u=(1-x2)ndx dv=dx
du=-2xn(1-x2)n-1dx v=x
In
=int.{0 to 1}(1-x2)n dx
=[x(1-x2)n]{0 to 1}+int.{0 to 1}n2x2(1-x2)n-1dx
=2n int.{0 to 1}x2(1-x2)n-1dx
=2n int.{0 to 1}-(1-x2-1)(1-x2)n-1dx
=-2n int.{0 to 1}(1-x2)n-(1-x2)n-1dx
=-2n[In-In-1]
In(1+2n)=2nIn-1
In=2nIn-1/(2n+1)
 
Last edited by a moderator:
P

pLuvia

Guest
Just put an easy one to get this thread bumped up again

Prove that
[a+b+c]/3>√abc
 
P

pLuvia

Guest
Prove a/b + b/c + c/a + c/b + b/a + a/c > 6
a/b+b/c+c/a+c/b+b/a+a/c-6
=[a2c+ab2+bc2+ac2+b2c+a2b-6abc]/abc
=[1/abc][a(b2-2bc+c2)+b(a2-2ac+c2)+c(a2-2ab+b2)]
=[1/abc][a(b-c)2+b(a-c)2+c(a-b)2]
>0
Hence a/b+b/c+c/a+c/b+b/a+a/c>6
 

Mountain.Dew

Magician, and Lawyer.
Joined
Nov 6, 2005
Messages
825
Location
Sydney, Australia
Gender
Male
HSC
2005
LottoX said:
We know that a2 + b2 > 2ab.

Therefore a + b > 2√ab by substitution.

and similarly b + c > 2√bc and a + c > 2√ac

So if we add all these together we get 2 (a + b + c) > 6√abc

Therefore a + b + c > 3√abc.
whats the 'proof' for the fact that 2√ac + 2√bc + 2√ac > 6√abc?

is it assumed that √ac or √bc or √ab > 1?

pLuvia said:
Prove a/b + b/c + c/a + c/b + b/a + a/c > 6
a/b+b/c+c/a+c/b+b/a+a/c-6
=[a2c+ab2+bc2+ac2+b2c+a2b-6abc]/abc
=[1/abc][a(b2-2bc+c2)+b(a2-2ac+c2)+c(a2-2ab+b2)]
=[1/abc][a(b-c)2+b(a-c)2+c(a-b)2]
>0
Hence a/b+b/c+c/a+c/b+b/a+a/c>6
ooooo very elegant solution
 
P

pLuvia

Guest
Extension to the question
First prove that [a+b+c+d]/4=4√abcd
Then find an expression for d in terms of a,b and c

That should help ;)
 

Yip

Member
Joined
Sep 14, 2005
Messages
140
Gender
Male
HSC
2006
(a+b)/2>√ab
(c+d)/2>√cd
(a+b+c+d)/2>√ab+√cd
a+b+c+d>2(√ab+√cd)>2(2√√abcd)=4<sup>4</sup>√abcd
[a+b+c+d]/4=<sup>4</sup>√abcd

Letting d=a+b+c/3,

LHS=4/3(a+b+c)>4<sup>4</sup>√abc(<sup>4</sup>√[a+b+c]/<sup>4</sup>√3)
[(a+b+c)^(3/4)]/3><sup>4</sup>√abc/<sup>4</sup>√3
[(a+b+c)^(3/4)]><sup>4</sup>√27abc
(a+b+c)^3>27abc
a+b+c>3<sup>3</sup>√abc

Prove that
[a+b+c]/3>√abc
I think pluvia had a typo,
if u sub a=1,b=2,c=3, u get 2>√6 which is obviously false
2><sup>3</sup>√6 makes more sense

UMAT tomorrow -_- nande...~.~
 

Mountain.Dew

Magician, and Lawyer.
Joined
Nov 6, 2005
Messages
825
Location
Sydney, Australia
Gender
Male
HSC
2005
pLuvia said:
What's the other way of doing it? Just wanting to know ;)
we know that:

a<sup>2</sup> + b<sup>2</sup> > 2ab

therefore, when divide a/b + b/a > 2

hence, b/c + c/b > 2, c/a + a/c > 2

add em all together: a/b + b/c + c/a + c/b + b/a + a/c > 6

ummm i take back my comment on your 'elegant solution'. i find this far easier and more efficient :) sorry, tis was my bad, pLuvia.
 

Riviet

.
Joined
Oct 11, 2005
Messages
5,593
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
Ooh nice proof Yip, also good luck with UMAT too, don't stay up too late studying for it! :p
 
Last edited:
P

pLuvia

Guest
Opps my bad, I actually meant to type
[a+b+c/3]3>√abc
Sorry LottoX ;)

Good luck with the UMAT
 

bboyelement

Member
Joined
May 3, 2005
Messages
242
Gender
Male
HSC
2006
LottoX said:
S'ok, as long as I know it's not my crapiness making me fail the question.

I can't believe the UMAT is actually tomorrow. I feel so nervous.

Anyway:

Given: t/(a+b) = 1, prove 1/a2 + 1/b2 > 8/t2
therefore t=a+b
1/a2+ 1/b2 = (1/a - 1/b)2 + 2/ab
1/a2+ 1/b2 > 2/ab
(a + b)2 = (a - b)2+ 4ab
(a + b)2 > 4ab
ab< (a + b)2/4

1/a2 + 1/b2 > 2/(a + b)2/4
1/a2 + 1/b2 > 8/(a + b)2
1/a2 + 1/b2 > 8/t2

prove
(b + c + d)(a + c + d)(a + b + d)(a + b + c) > 81abcd

btw. a,b,c,d all bigger than 0
 
Last edited:

Riviet

.
Joined
Oct 11, 2005
Messages
5,593
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
bboyelement said:
prove
(b + c + d)(a + c + d)(a + b + d)(a + b + c) > 81abcd

btw. a,b,c,d all bigger than 0
By AM/GM inequality:
(b+c+d)/3 > (bcd)1/3 (1)

Similarly,
(a+c+d)/3 > (acd)1/3 (2)

(a+b+d)/3 > (abd)1/3 (3)

(a+b+c)/3 > (abc)1/3 (4)

(1)(2)(3)(4) => {(b+c+d)(a+c+d)(a+b+d)(a+b+c)}/81 > (a3b3c3d3)1/3

.'. (b+c+d)(a+c+d)(a+b+d)(a+b+c) > 81abcd, as required.
 
Last edited:

Riviet

.
Joined
Oct 11, 2005
Messages
5,593
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
Next Question:
The region bounded by y=1/(x+1), y=x/(x+1) and the y-axis is rotated about the y-axis through one complete revolution.

i) Use the method of cylindrical shells to show that the volume of the solid of revolution is given by:
aaaaaa1
V = 2pi∫{x(1-x)/(1+x)} dx
aaaaa0

ii) Write x(1-x)/(1+x) in the form ax + b + c/(x+1) to find the exact value of the above integral and hence the volume of the solid of revolution.
 

Mountain.Dew

Magician, and Lawyer.
Joined
Nov 6, 2005
Messages
825
Location
Sydney, Australia
Gender
Male
HSC
2005
LottoX said:
Bah, I forgot both. Anyway:

Show that for n > 1

1ln(2/1) + 2ln(3/2) + ... + nln{(n+1)/n} = ln({n+1}n/n!)
1ln(2/1) + 2ln(3/2) + ... + nln{(n+1)/n}

LHS = ln 2 - ln 1 + 2ln3 - 2ln2 + 3ln4 - 3ln3 + 4ln5 - 4ln4 + ... + (n-1)ln(n) - (n-1)ln(n-1) + nln(n+1) - nln(n) = - ln1 - ln2 - ln3 - ln4 - .... - ln(n) + nln(n+1)

= nln(n+1) - (ln1 + ln2 + ln3 +...+ln(n)) = nln(n+1) - ln(1.2.3.4...n) = ln(n+1)n - ln(n!) = ln({n+1}n/n!) = RHS
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top