Problems and Solutions, JBMO 2014: Problem 1. Find All Distinct Prime Numbers P, Q and R Such That
Problems and Solutions, JBMO 2014: Problem 1. Find All Distinct Prime Numbers P, Q and R Such That
Problems and Solutions, JBMO 2014: Problem 1. Find All Distinct Prime Numbers P, Q and R Such That
Solution. First notice that if both primes q and r differ from 3 , then q 2 º r 2 º 1(mod 3) ,
hence the left hand side of the given equation is congruent to zero modulo 3, which is
impossible since 26 is not divisible by 3 . Thus, q = 3 or r = 3 . We consider two cases.
Case 1. q = 3 .
The equation reduces to 3p 4 - 4r 2 = 431 (1) .
If p ¹ 5, by Fermat’s little theorem, p 4 º 1 (mod 5) , which yields
3 - 4r 2 º 1 (mod 5) , or equivalently, r 2 + 2 º 0 (mod 5) . The last congruence is
impossible in view of the fact that a residue of a square of a positive integer belongs to the
set { 0, 1, 4 } . Therefore p = 5 and r = 19 .
Case 2. r = 3 .
The equation becomes 3p 4 - 5q 4 = 62 (2) .
Obviously p ¹ 5 . Hence, Fermat’s little theorem gives p 4 º 1 (mod 5) . But then
5q 4 º 1 (mod 5) , which is impossible .
Hence, the only solution of the given equation is p = 5 , q = 3 , r = 19 .
Problem 2. Consider an acute triangle ABC with area S. Let CD ^ AB ( D Î AB ),
DM ^ AC ( M Î AC ) and DN ^ BC ( N Î BC ). Denote by H 1 and H 2 the
orthocentres of the triangles MNC and MND respectively. Find the area of the
quadrilateral AH 1BH 2 in terms of S.
(a + ) + (b + c1 ) + (c + a1 )
2 2 2
1
b a + b1 + b + c1 + c + a1
³
3 3
(a + b1 + b + c1 + c + a1 )
2 2 2 2
æ ö æ ö æ ö÷
çça + 1 ÷÷ + ççb + 1 ÷÷ 1
+ çççc + ÷÷ ³ (1)
çè b ø÷÷ èç c ø÷÷ è a ø÷ 3
1 1 1 1
From AM-GM we have + + ³ 33 = 3 , and substituting in (1) we get
a b c abc
Solution 3.
By using x 2 + y 2 + z 2 ³ xy + yz + zx
2 2 2
æ ö æ ö æ ö
çça + 1 ÷÷ + ççb + 1 ÷÷ + ççc + 1 ÷÷ = a 2 + b 2 + c 2 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 2a + 2b + 2c ³
çè b ÷÷ø çè c ÷÷ø çè a ÷÷ø b2 c2 a 2 b c a
1 1 1 2a 2b 2c
³ ab + ac + bc + + + + + + .
bc ca ab b c a
Clearly
1 1 1 abc abc abc
+ + = + + = a +b +c,
bc ca ab bc ca ab
a b c
ab + + bc + + ca + ³ 2a + 2b + 2c,
b c a
a b c a b c
+ + ³ 3 3 ⋅ ⋅ = 3.
b c a b c a
Hence
2 2 2
æ ö æ ö æ ö æ ö æ ö æ ö
çça + 1 ÷÷ + ççb + 1 ÷÷ + ççc + 1 ÷÷ ³ ççab + a ÷÷ + ççac + c ÷÷ + ççbc + b ÷÷ + a + b + c + a + b + c ³
çè b ÷ø÷ çè c ø÷÷ èç a ø÷÷ èç b ø÷÷ èç a ø÷÷ èç c ø÷÷ b c a
³ 2a + 2b + 2c + a + b + c + 3 = 3 (a + b + c + 1).
x y z
Solution 4. a = ,b= ,c=
y z x
2 2 2
æx z ö æy x ö æz y ö æx y z ö
ççç + ÷÷÷ + ççç + ÷÷÷ + ççç + ÷÷÷ ³ 3 ççç + + + 1÷÷÷
è y y ÷ø è z z ø÷ è x x ø÷ èy z x ø÷
(x + z )2 x 2z 2 + (y + x )2 y 2x 2 + (z + y )2 z 2y 2 ³ 3xyz (x 2z + y 2x + z 2y + xyz )
x 4z 2 + 2x 3z 3 + x 2z 4 + x 2y 4 + 2x 3y 3 + x 4y 2 + y 2z 4 + 2y 3z 3 + y 4z 2 ³ 3x 3yz 2 + 3x 2y 3z + 3xy 2z 3 + 3x 2y 2z 2
1)x 3y 3 + y 3z 3 + z 3x 3 ³ 3x 2y 2z 2 .
2)x 4z 2 + z 4x 2 + x 3y 3 ³ 3x 3z 2y üïï
ï
3)x 4y 2 + y 4x 2 + y 3z 3 ³ 3y 3x 2z ïý
ï
4)z 4y 2 + y 4z 2 + x 3z 3 ³ 3z 3y 2x ïïï
þ
Equality holds when x = y = z , i.e., a = b = c = 1 .
1
Solution 5. å (a + b ) 2
³ 3å a + 3
cyc cyc
a æ 1 ö
2å + å çça 2 + 2 - 3a - 1÷÷÷ ³ 0
cyc b
ç
cyc è a ÷ø
a abc
2å ³ 63 =6 (1)
cyc b bca
1 3
"a > 0, a 2 +
2
- 3a ³ - 4
a a
4 3 2
a - 3a + 4a - 3a + 1 ³ 0
(
(a - 1) a 2 - a + 1 ³ 0 )
2
æ 1 ö÷ 1 1
å çèçça 2
+
a 2
- 3a - 1÷÷÷ ³ 3å a - 15 ³ 9 abc - 15 = -6
ø
3 (2)
cyc cyc
Solution. Denote by k the sought number and let {s1, s2 ,..., sk } be the corresponding values
for s . We call each si a losing number and every other nonnegative integer a winning
numbers.
Suppose there are two different losing numbers si > s j , which are congruent modulo n .
Then, on his first turn of play, player A may remove si - s j stones (since n si - s j ),
leaving a pile with s j stones for B. This is in contradiction with both si and s j being
losing numbers.
Proof of the lemma: Suppose such a pair (u, n ) and a corresponding arithmetic
¥
progression (a )
t t =1
exist. In exist arbitrarily long patches of consecutive composites.
Take such a patch P of length 3un . Then, at least one segment éêëai - u, ai + u ùúû is fully
contained in P , a contradiction.
Suppose such a nonzero residue class modulo n exists (hence n > 1 ). Let u Î be greater
than every loosing number. Consider the members of the supposed residue class which are
greater than u . They form an arithmetic progression with the property (*) , a
contradiction (by the lemma).