Difference between revisions of "2014 AIME I Problems/Problem 3"

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We know that the numerator of the fraction cannot be even, because the denominator would also be even. We also know that the numerator cannot be a multiple of <math>5</math> because the denominator would also be a multiple of <math>5</math>. Proceed by listing out all the other possible fractions and we realize that the numerator and denominator are always relatively prime. We have <math>499</math> fractions to start with, and <math>250</math> with odd numerators. Subtract <math>50</math> to account for the multiples of <math>5</math>, and we get <math>\boxed{200}</math>.
 
We know that the numerator of the fraction cannot be even, because the denominator would also be even. We also know that the numerator cannot be a multiple of <math>5</math> because the denominator would also be a multiple of <math>5</math>. Proceed by listing out all the other possible fractions and we realize that the numerator and denominator are always relatively prime. We have <math>499</math> fractions to start with, and <math>250</math> with odd numerators. Subtract <math>50</math> to account for the multiples of <math>5</math>, and we get <math>\boxed{200}</math>.
  
== Solution 5 ==  
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== Solution 5 (Euclidean Algorithm, fast and simple)==  
  
Let the numerator and denominator <math>x,y</math> with <math>\gcd(x,y)</math> and <math>x+y = 1000.</math> Now if <math>\gcd(1000,x) = 1</math> then <math>\gcd(x,1000-x) = \gcd(x,y) = 1.</math> Therefore any pair that works satisfies <math>\gcd(x,1000)= 1.</math> There are <math>\phi(1000) = 400</math> pairs <math>x,y</math> such that <math>x+y= 1000</math> and <math>\gcd(x,y) = 1.</math> However, exactly half of them work because of the condition <math>x<y.</math> Therefore the desired answer is <math>\boxed{200}.</math>
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Let the numerator and denominator <math>x,y</math> with <math>\gcd(x,y)=1</math> and <math>x+y = 1000.</math> Now if <math>\gcd(x,y) = 1</math> then <math>\gcd(x,y) =\gcd(x,1000-x)= \gcd(x,1000-x-(-1)x)=\gcd(x,1000)=1.</math> Therefore any pair that works satisfies <math>\gcd(x,1000)= 1.</math> By Euler's totient theorem, there are <math>\phi(1000) = 400</math> numbers relatively prime to 1000 from 1 to 1000. Recall that <math>r=\frac{x}{y}<1</math>, so we want <math>x<y=1000-x.</math> Therefore the desired answer is <math>\boxed{200}.</math>
  
 
== Solution 6 ==
 
== Solution 6 ==

Revision as of 02:23, 27 June 2023

Problem 3

Find the number of rational numbers $r$, $0<r<1$, such that when $r$ is written as a fraction in lowest terms, the numerator and the denominator have a sum of 1000.


Solution 1

We know that the set of these rational numbers is from $\dfrac{1}{999}$ to $\dfrac{499}{501}$ where each each element $\dfrac{n}{m}$ has $n+m =1000$ and $\dfrac{n}{m}$ is irreducible.

We note that $\dfrac{n}{m} =\dfrac{1000-m}{m}=\dfrac{1000}{m}-1$. Hence, $\dfrac{n}{m}$ is irreducible if $\dfrac{1000}{m}$ is irreducible, and $\dfrac{1000}{m}$ is irreducible if $m$ is not divisible by $2$ or $5$. Thus, the answer to the question is the number of integers between $501$ and $999$ inclusive that are not divisible by $2$ or $5$.

We note there are $499$ numbers between $501$ and $999$, and

  • $249$ numbers are divisible by $2$
  • $99$ numbers are divisible by $5$
  • $49$ numbers are divisible by $10$

Using the Principle of Inclusion and Exclusion, we get that there are $499-249-99+49=200$ numbers between $501$ and $999$ are not divisible by either $2$ or $5$, so our answer is $\boxed{200}$.

Euler's Totient Function can also be used to arrive at $400$ numbers relatively prime to $1000$, meaning $200$ possible fractions satisfying the necessary conditions.

Solution 2

If the initial manipulation is not obvious, consider the Euclidean Algorithm. Instead of using $\frac{n}{m}$ as the fraction to use the Euclidean Algorithm on, we can rewrite this as $\frac{500-x}{500+x}$ or \[\gcd(500+x,500-x)=\gcd((500+x)+(500-x),500-x)=\gcd(1000,500-x).\] Thus, we want $\gcd(1000,500-x)=1$. You can either proceed as Solution $1$, or consider that no even numbers work, limiting us to $250$ choices of numbers and restricting $x$ to be odd. If $x$ is odd, $500-x$ is odd, so the only possible common factors $1000$ and $500-x$ can share are multiples of $5$. Thus, we want to avoid these. There are $50$ multiples of $5$ less than $500$, so the answer is $250-50=\boxed{200}$.

Solution 3

Say $r=\frac{d}{1000-d}$; then $1\leq d\leq499$. If this fraction is reducible, then the modulus of some number for $d$ is the same as the modulus for $1000-d$. Since $1000=2^3\cdot5^3$, that modulus can only be $2$ or $5$. This implies that if $d\mid2$ or $d\mid5$, the fraction is reducible. There are $249$ cases where $d\mid2$, $99$ where $d\mid5$, and $49$ where $d\mid(2\cdot5=10)$, so by PIE, the number of fails is $299$, so our answer is $\boxed{200}$.

Solution 4

We know that the numerator of the fraction cannot be even, because the denominator would also be even. We also know that the numerator cannot be a multiple of $5$ because the denominator would also be a multiple of $5$. Proceed by listing out all the other possible fractions and we realize that the numerator and denominator are always relatively prime. We have $499$ fractions to start with, and $250$ with odd numerators. Subtract $50$ to account for the multiples of $5$, and we get $\boxed{200}$.

Solution 5 (Euclidean Algorithm, fast and simple)

Let the numerator and denominator $x,y$ with $\gcd(x,y)=1$ and $x+y = 1000.$ Now if $\gcd(x,y) = 1$ then $\gcd(x,y) =\gcd(x,1000-x)= \gcd(x,1000-x-(-1)x)=\gcd(x,1000)=1.$ Therefore any pair that works satisfies $\gcd(x,1000)= 1.$ By Euler's totient theorem, there are $\phi(1000) = 400$ numbers relatively prime to 1000 from 1 to 1000. Recall that $r=\frac{x}{y}<1$, so we want $x<y=1000-x.$ Therefore the desired answer is $\boxed{200}.$

Solution 6

We notice that there are a total of $400$ fractions that are in simplest form where the numerator and denominator add up to $1000$. Because the numerator and denominator have to be relatively prime, there are $\varphi(1000)=400$ fractions. Half of these are greater than $1$, so the answer is $400\div2=\boxed{200}$

- bedwarsnoob

~MathFun1000 (Minor Edits)

Solution 7

Our fraction can be written in the form $\frac{1000 - a}{a} = \frac{1000}{a} - 1.$ Thus the fraction is reducible when $a$ divides $1000.$ We also want $500 < a < 1000.$ By PIE, the total values of $a$ that make the fraction reducible is, \[249 + 99 - 49 = 299.\] By complementary counting, the answer we want is $499 - 299 = \boxed{200}.$

Solution 8 (Simplest)

Suppose our fraction is $\frac{a}{b}$. The given condition means $a+b=1000$. Now, if $a$ and $b$ share a common factor greater than $1$, then the expression $a+b$ must also contain that common factor. This means our fraction cannot have a factor of $5$ or be even.

There are $250$ fractions that aren’t even. From this, $50$ are divisible by $5$, which means the answer is $250-50=\boxed{200}$

~Geometry285

See also

2014 AIME I (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 2
Followed by
Problem 4
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
All AIME Problems and Solutions

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