1996 USAMO Problems/Problem 1
Problem
Prove that the average of the numbers
is
.
Solution
Solution 1
First, as
we omit that term. Now, we multiply by
to get, after using product to sum,
.
This simplifies to
. Since
this simplifies to
. We multiplied by
in the beginning, so we must divide by it now, and thus the sum is just
, so the average is
, as desired.
Solution 2
Notice that for every
there exists a corresponding pair term
, for
not
. Pairing gives the sum of all
terms to be
, and thus the average is
We need to show that
. Multiplying (*) by
and using sum-to-product and telescoping gives
. Thus,
, as desired.
Solution 3 (Very long and detailed)
Make the sum of the numbers equal
. Now,
the average of these numbers is
.
We know that
, so we can eliminate that term and use the identity,
to get
Or,
Pairing the terms up, using sum-product identity, and simplifying, yields:
.
After dividing both sides by
, you get:
.
Now we have to prove that
.
Multiply both sides by
to get
.
After applying product-sum identities, you get
.
This is just
.
After applying angle addition formulas, you get:
.
Since the cosine and sine of
are
you can simplify that to:
. Or,
.
Therefore, the average of the numbers
(
) is
.
See Also
| 1996 USAMO (Problems • Resources) | ||
| Preceded by First Question |
Followed by Problem 2 | |
| 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 | ||
| All USAMO Problems and Solutions | ||
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