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k a May Highlights and 2025 AoPS Online Class Information
jlacosta   0
May 1, 2025
May is an exciting month! National MATHCOUNTS is the second week of May in Washington D.C. and our Founder, Richard Rusczyk will be presenting a seminar, Preparing Strong Math Students for College and Careers, on May 11th.

Are you interested in working towards MATHCOUNTS and don’t know where to start? We have you covered! If you have taken Prealgebra, then you are ready for MATHCOUNTS/AMC 8 Basics. Already aiming for State or National MATHCOUNTS and harder AMC 8 problems? Then our MATHCOUNTS/AMC 8 Advanced course is for you.

Summer camps are starting next month at the Virtual Campus in math and language arts that are 2 - to 4 - weeks in duration. Spaces are still available - don’t miss your chance to have an enriching summer experience. There are middle and high school competition math camps as well as Math Beasts camps that review key topics coupled with fun explorations covering areas such as graph theory (Math Beasts Camp 6), cryptography (Math Beasts Camp 7-8), and topology (Math Beasts Camp 8-9)!

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[*]May 21st, 4:00pm PT/7:00pm ET, Mathcamp 2025 Qualifying Quiz Part 2 Math Jam, Problems 5 and 6, Canada/USA Mathcamp staff will discuss solutions to Problems 5 and 6 of the 2025 Mathcamp Qualifying Quiz![/list]
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0 replies
jlacosta
May 1, 2025
0 replies
k i Adding contests to the Contest Collections
dcouchman   1
N Apr 5, 2023 by v_Enhance
Want to help AoPS remain a valuable Olympiad resource? Help us add contests to AoPS's Contest Collections.

Find instructions and a list of contests to add here: https://artofproblemsolving.com/community/c40244h1064480_contests_to_add
1 reply
dcouchman
Sep 9, 2019
v_Enhance
Apr 5, 2023
k i Zero tolerance
ZetaX   49
N May 4, 2019 by NoDealsHere
Source: Use your common sense! (enough is enough)
Some users don't want to learn, some other simply ignore advises.
But please follow the following guideline:


To make it short: ALWAYS USE YOUR COMMON SENSE IF POSTING!
If you don't have common sense, don't post.


More specifically:

For new threads:


a) Good, meaningful title:
The title has to say what the problem is about in best way possible.
If that title occured already, it's definitely bad. And contest names aren't good either.
That's in fact a requirement for being able to search old problems.

Examples:
Bad titles:
- "Hard"/"Medium"/"Easy" (if you find it so cool how hard/easy it is, tell it in the post and use a title that tells us the problem)
- "Number Theory" (hey guy, guess why this forum's named that way¿ and is it the only such problem on earth¿)
- "Fibonacci" (there are millions of Fibonacci problems out there, all posted and named the same...)
- "Chinese TST 2003" (does this say anything about the problem¿)
Good titles:
- "On divisors of a³+2b³+4c³-6abc"
- "Number of solutions to x²+y²=6z²"
- "Fibonacci numbers are never squares"


b) Use search function:
Before posting a "new" problem spend at least two, better five, minutes to look if this problem was posted before. If it was, don't repost it. If you have anything important to say on topic, post it in one of the older threads.
If the thread is locked cause of this, use search function.

Update (by Amir Hossein). The best way to search for two keywords in AoPS is to input
[code]+"first keyword" +"second keyword"[/code]
so that any post containing both strings "first word" and "second form".


c) Good problem statement:
Some recent really bad post was:
[quote]$lim_{n\to 1}^{+\infty}\frac{1}{n}-lnn$[/quote]
It contains no question and no answer.
If you do this, too, you are on the best way to get your thread deleted. Write everything clearly, define where your variables come from (and define the "natural" numbers if used). Additionally read your post at least twice before submitting. After you sent it, read it again and use the Edit-Button if necessary to correct errors.


For answers to already existing threads:


d) Of any interest and with content:
Don't post things that are more trivial than completely obvious. For example, if the question is to solve $x^{3}+y^{3}=z^{3}$, do not answer with "$x=y=z=0$ is a solution" only. Either you post any kind of proof or at least something unexpected (like "$x=1337, y=481, z=42$ is the smallest solution). Someone that does not see that $x=y=z=0$ is a solution of the above without your post is completely wrong here, this is an IMO-level forum.
Similar, posting "I have solved this problem" but not posting anything else is not welcome; it even looks that you just want to show off what a genius you are.

e) Well written and checked answers:
Like c) for new threads, check your solutions at least twice for mistakes. And after sending, read it again and use the Edit-Button if necessary to correct errors.



To repeat it: ALWAYS USE YOUR COMMON SENSE IF POSTING!


Everything definitely out of range of common sense will be locked or deleted (exept for new users having less than about 42 posts, they are newbies and need/get some time to learn).

The above rules will be applied from next monday (5. march of 2007).
Feel free to discuss on this here.
49 replies
ZetaX
Feb 27, 2007
NoDealsHere
May 4, 2019
JBMO Shortlist 2023 G7
Orestis_Lignos   7
N 3 minutes ago by tilya_TASh
Source: JBMO Shortlist 2023, G7
Let $D$ and $E$ be arbitrary points on the sides $BC$ and $AC$ of triangle $ABC$, respectively. The circumcircle of $\triangle ADC$ meets for the second time the circumcircle of $\triangle BCE$ at point $F$. Line $FE$ meets line $AD$ at point $G$, while line $FD$ meets line $BE$ at point $H$. Prove that lines $CF, AH$ and $BG$ pass through the same point.
7 replies
Orestis_Lignos
Jun 28, 2024
tilya_TASh
3 minutes ago
Reflected point lies on radical axis
Mahdi_Mashayekhi   5
N 6 minutes ago by Mahdi_Mashayekhi
Source: Iran 2025 second round P4
Given is an acute and scalene triangle $ABC$ with circumcenter $O$. $BO$ and $CO$ intersect the altitude from $A$ to $BC$ at points $P$ and $Q$ respectively. $X$ is the circumcenter of triangle $OPQ$ and $O'$ is the reflection of $O$ over $BC$. $Y$ is the second intersection of circumcircles of triangles $BXP$ and $CXQ$. Show that $X,Y,O'$ are collinear.
5 replies
Mahdi_Mashayekhi
Apr 19, 2025
Mahdi_Mashayekhi
6 minutes ago
Find the value
sqing   18
N 15 minutes ago by Yiyj
Source: 2024 China Fujian High School Mathematics Competition
Let $f(x)=a_6x^6+a_5x^5+a_4x^4+a_3x^3+a_2x^2+a_1x+a_0,$ $a_i\in\{-1,1\} ,i=0,1,2,\cdots,6 $ and $f(2)=-53 .$ Find the value of $f(1).$
18 replies
sqing
Jun 22, 2024
Yiyj
15 minutes ago
Number Theory
fasttrust_12-mn   14
N an hour ago by Namisgood
Source: Pan African Mathematics Olympiad P1
Find all positive intgers $a,b$ and $c$ such that $\frac{a+b}{a+c}=\frac{b+c}{b+a}$ and $ab+bc+ca$ is a prime number
14 replies
fasttrust_12-mn
Aug 15, 2024
Namisgood
an hour ago
find question
mathematical-forest   5
N an hour ago by Jupiterballs
Are there any contest questions that seem simple but are actually difficult? :-D
5 replies
mathematical-forest
Thursday at 10:19 AM
Jupiterballs
an hour ago
Own made functional equation
Primeniyazidayi   10
N an hour ago by Phat_23000245
Source: own(probably)
Find all functions $f:R \rightarrow R$ such that $xf(x^2+2f(y)-yf(x))=f(x)^3-f(y)(f(x^2)-2f(x))$ for all $x,y \in \mathbb{R}$
10 replies
+1 w
Primeniyazidayi
May 26, 2025
Phat_23000245
an hour ago
Tough inequality
TUAN2k8   4
N an hour ago by Phat_23000245
Source: Own
Let $n \ge 2$ be an even integer and let $x_1,x_2,...,x_n$ be real numbers satisfying $x_1^2+x_2^2+...+x_n^2=n$.
Prove that
$\sum_{1 \le i < j \le n} \frac{x_ix_j}{x_i^2+x_j^2+1} \ge \frac{-n}{6}$
4 replies
TUAN2k8
May 28, 2025
Phat_23000245
an hour ago
Guess period of function
a1267ab   9
N 2 hours ago by HamstPan38825
Source: USA TST 2025
Let $n$ be a positive integer. Ana and Banana play a game. Banana thinks of a function $f\colon\mathbb{Z}\to\mathbb{Z}$ and a prime number $p$. He tells Ana that $f$ is nonconstant, $p<100$, and $f(x+p)=f(x)$ for all integers $x$. Ana's goal is to determine the value of $p$. She writes down $n$ integers $x_1,\dots,x_n$. After seeing this list, Banana writes down $f(x_1),\dots,f(x_n)$ in order. Ana wins if she can determine the value of $p$ from this information. Find the smallest value of $n$ for which Ana has a winning strategy.

Anthony Wang
9 replies
1 viewing
a1267ab
Dec 14, 2024
HamstPan38825
2 hours ago
Inequality with abc=1
tenplusten   11
N 2 hours ago by sqing
Source: JBMO 2011 Shortlist A7
$\boxed{\text{A7}}$ Let $a,b,c$ be positive reals such that $abc=1$.Prove the inequality $\sum\frac{2a^2+\frac{1}{a}}{b+\frac{1}{a}+1}\geq 3$
11 replies
tenplusten
May 15, 2016
sqing
2 hours ago
Central sequences
EeEeRUT   13
N 3 hours ago by v_Enhance
Source: EGMO 2025 P2
An infinite increasing sequence $a_1 < a_2 < a_3 < \cdots$ of positive integers is called central if for every positive integer $n$ , the arithmetic mean of the first $a_n$ terms of the sequence is equal to $a_n$.

Show that there exists an infinite sequence $b_1, b_2, b_3, \dots$ of positive integers such that for every central sequence $a_1, a_2, a_3, \dots, $ there are infinitely many positive integers $n$ with $a_n = b_n$.
13 replies
EeEeRUT
Apr 16, 2025
v_Enhance
3 hours ago
Interesting inequality
sqing   0
3 hours ago
Source: Own
Let $ a,b,c\geq  0 , a^2+b^2+c^2 =3.$ Prove that
$$ a^4+ b^4+c^4+6abc\leq9$$$$ a^3+ b^3+  c^3+3( \sqrt{3}-1)abc\leq 3\sqrt 3$$
0 replies
sqing
3 hours ago
0 replies
IMO Shortlist 2014 C7
hajimbrak   19
N 3 hours ago by quantam13
Let $M$ be a set of $n \ge 4$ points in the plane, no three of which are collinear. Initially these points are connected with $n$ segments so that each point in $M$ is the endpoint of exactly two segments. Then, at each step, one may choose two segments $AB$ and $CD$ sharing a common interior point and replace them by the segments $AC$ and $BD$ if none of them is present at this moment. Prove that it is impossible to perform $n^3 /4$ or more such moves.

Proposed by Vladislav Volkov, Russia
19 replies
hajimbrak
Jul 11, 2015
quantam13
3 hours ago
<BAC = 2 <ABC wanted, AC + AI = BC given , incenter I
parmenides51   3
N 4 hours ago by LeYohan
Source: 2020 Dutch IMO TST 1.1
In acute-angled triangle $ABC, I$ is the center of the inscribed circle and holds $| AC | + | AI | = | BC |$. Prove that $\angle BAC = 2 \angle ABC$.
3 replies
parmenides51
Nov 21, 2020
LeYohan
4 hours ago
China South East Mathematical Olympiad 2014 Q3B
sqing   5
N 4 hours ago by MathLuis
Source: China Zhejiang Fuyang , 27 Jul 2014
Let $p$ be a primes ,$x,y,z $ be positive integers such that $x<y<z<p$ and $\{\frac{x^3}{p}\}=\{\frac{y^3}{p}\}=\{\frac{z^3}{p}\}$.
Prove that $(x+y+z)|(x^5+y^5+z^5).$
5 replies
sqing
Aug 17, 2014
MathLuis
4 hours ago
Infimum of decreasing sequence b_n/n^2
a1267ab   35
N May 6, 2025 by shendrew7
Source: USA Winter TST for IMO 2020, Problem 1 and TST for EGMO 2020, Problem 3, by Carl Schildkraut and Milan Haiman
Choose positive integers $b_1, b_2, \dotsc$ satisfying
\[1=\frac{b_1}{1^2} > \frac{b_2}{2^2} > \frac{b_3}{3^2} > \frac{b_4}{4^2} > \dotsb\]and let $r$ denote the largest real number satisfying $\tfrac{b_n}{n^2} \geq r$ for all positive integers $n$. What are the possible values of $r$ across all possible choices of the sequence $(b_n)$?

Carl Schildkraut and Milan Haiman
35 replies
a1267ab
Dec 16, 2019
shendrew7
May 6, 2025
Infimum of decreasing sequence b_n/n^2
G H J
G H BBookmark kLocked kLocked NReply
Source: USA Winter TST for IMO 2020, Problem 1 and TST for EGMO 2020, Problem 3, by Carl Schildkraut and Milan Haiman
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a1267ab
223 posts
#1 • 5 Y
Y by centslordm, Pluto1708, megarnie, Adventure10, kub-inst
Choose positive integers $b_1, b_2, \dotsc$ satisfying
\[1=\frac{b_1}{1^2} > \frac{b_2}{2^2} > \frac{b_3}{3^2} > \frac{b_4}{4^2} > \dotsb\]and let $r$ denote the largest real number satisfying $\tfrac{b_n}{n^2} \geq r$ for all positive integers $n$. What are the possible values of $r$ across all possible choices of the sequence $(b_n)$?

Carl Schildkraut and Milan Haiman
This post has been edited 3 times. Last edited by a1267ab, Dec 16, 2019, 6:11 PM
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TheUltimate123
1740 posts
#2 • 9 Y
Y by Idio-logy, Williamgolly, Doxuantrong, ashrith9sagar_1, CALCMAN, centslordm, Pluto1708, Adventure10, MS_asdfgzxcvb
The answer is $0\le r\le1/2$.
Claim. $r=1/2$ works, and is maximal.

Proof. To achieve $r=1/2$, take $b_n=n(n+1)/2$, from which \[\frac{b_n}{n^2}=\frac{n(n+1)}{2n^2}=\frac{n+1}{2n}=\frac12+\frac1{2n},\]which clearly satisfies the problem condition. We inductively show that $b_n\le n(n+1)/2$. The base case has been given to us. Now, if the hypothesis holds for all integers less than $n$, then \[\frac{b_n}{n^2}<\frac{b_{n-1}}{(n-1)^2}\le\frac n{2(n-1)}\implies b_n<\frac{n^3}{2(n-1)}.\]It is easy to verify the largest possiblie $b_n$ is $n(n+1)/2$, as claimed. $\blacksquare$
Claim. All $r<1/2$ work.

Proof. Consider the sequence $(a_n)$ defined by $a_n:=\left\lceil kn^2\right\rceil+n$. Since $a_n$ is $O(n^2)$ and $k<1/2$, there exists $N$ such that for all $n\ge N$, $a_n/n^2<1/2$. I claim the sequence \[b_n:=\begin{cases}n(n+1)/2&\text{ for }n<N\\ a_n&\text{ for }n\ge N\end{cases}\]works. By definition of $N$, $b_n/n^2>b_{n+1}/(n+1)^2$ for $n<N$, so it suffices to verify $a_n/n^2$ is strictly decreasing for $n\ge N$.

In other words, we want to show that \[L:=\frac{\left\lceil kn^2\right\rceil+n}{n^2}>\frac{\left\lceil k(n+1)^2\right\rceil+n+1}{(n+1)^2}=:R\]for all $n\ge N$. Since $\left\lceil kn^2\right\rceil\ge kn^2$, \[L\ge\frac{kn^2+n}{n^2}=k+\frac1n,\]and similarly since $\left\lceil k(n+1)^2\right\rceil<k(n+1)^2+1$, \[R<\frac{k(n+1)^2+n+2}{(n+1)^2}=\frac1k+\frac{n+2}{(n+1)^2},\]so it suffices to verify that \[\frac1n\ge\frac{n+2}{(n+1)^2}\iff(n+1)^2\ge n(n+2),\]which is true. $\blacksquare$
Combining these two claims, we are done.
This post has been edited 1 time. Last edited by TheUltimate123, Dec 16, 2019, 5:49 PM
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spartacle
538 posts
#3 • 3 Y
Y by pad, centslordm, Adventure10
Sad... I essentially discovered this construction, but didn't think of replacing the initial "too large" terms with triangular numbers.
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jeff10
1117 posts
#4 • 2 Y
Y by centslordm, Adventure10
Another Construction
This post has been edited 1 time. Last edited by jeff10, Dec 16, 2019, 8:20 PM
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MarkBcc168
1595 posts
#5 • 6 Y
Y by Mathphile01, SpecialBeing2017, MintTea, centslordm, Adventure10, Mango247
P1

The answer is $[0,\tfrac{1}{2}]$. We prove the bound first. Consider the following claim.

Claim: $b_n\leq\frac{n(n+1)}{2}$ for all positive integer $n$.

Proof: Induct on $n$. The base case $n=1$ is obvious. Assume that $b_{n-1}\leq\tfrac{n(n-1)}{2}$. We will prove that $b_{n}\leq\tfrac{n(n+1)}{2}$. Note that
\begin{align*}
b_{n} &< \frac{n^2}{(n-1)^2}\cdot\frac{n(n-1)}{2} \\
&= \frac{n^3}{2(n-1)} \\
&= \frac{n^3-n}{2(n-1)} + \frac{n}{2(n-1)} \\
&< \frac{n(n+1)}{2}+1
\end{align*}hence we are done.$\blacksquare$

The claim immediately implies the bound. Now we move on to the construction part.

The equality case above $b_n=\tfrac{n(n+1)}{2}$ gives $\tfrac{1}{2}$. Now we give a sequence with converge to $L$ for $0<L<\tfrac{1}{2}$. Define
$$s_n = \frac{1}{n^2} + \frac{1}{(n+1)^2} + \frac{1}{(n+2)^2} + \hdots$$Let $M$ be the smallest positive integer which $s_M<\tfrac{1}{2}-L$. We define the sequence $b_n$ by
$$b_n = \begin{cases}
\frac{n(n+1)}{2} & n<M^{2019} \\
\lfloor n^2(L+s_n)\rfloor & \text{otherwise.}
\end{cases}$$By the condition, for large $n$ we have
$$\frac{b_n}{n^2}\in \left(L+s_n+\frac{1}{n^2}, L+s_n\right] = (L+s_{n+1}, L+s_n).$$Intervals of this type are disjoint. This gives the strictly increasing. Moreover, $L<\tfrac{b_n}{n^2}\leq L+s_n$ thus the sequence $\tfrac{b_n}{n^2}$ converges to $L$ as desired.
This post has been edited 1 time. Last edited by MarkBcc168, Dec 17, 2019, 10:50 AM
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IndoMathXdZ
694 posts
#6 • 4 Y
Y by FISHMJ25, MintTea, centslordm, Adventure10
I claim that any real numbers $0 \le r \le \frac{1}{2}$ satisfy this.

Notice that as $b_n \in \mathbb{N}$, then $\frac{b_n}{n^2} \in \mathbb{Q}^+$ for every $n \in \mathbb{N}$. This proves that $r \ge 0$.
To prove that $0$ is achievable, take $b_n = 1$ for all $n \in \mathbb{N}$ and we have
\[ \lim_{n \to \infty} \frac{b_n}{n^2} = \lim_{n \to \infty} \frac{1}{n^2} = 0\]To prove that $r \le \frac{1}{2}$ is maximum, notice that from the problem's constraint:
\[ \frac{b_{k+1}}{(k+1)^2} < \frac{b_k}{k^2} \]We'll prove by induction that $b_k \le \frac{k(k+1)}{2}$ for every $k \in \mathbb{N}$.
For $k = 1$, we have $b_1 = 1$.
For $k = 2$, notice that $b_2 \le 3$.
Now, suppose that $b_k \le \frac{k(k+1)}{2}$ for a value $k  \ge 2$.
\[  b_{k+1} < \frac{(k+1)^2}{k^2} b_k \le \frac{(k+1)^3}{2k} = \frac{k^2 + 3k + 2}{2} + \frac{k + 1}{2k}\]As $\frac{k^2+3k+2}{2} \in \mathbb{N}$ and $0 < \frac{k+1}{2k} < 1$. This gives us
\[ b_{k+1} \le \left \lfloor \frac{k^2 + 3k + 2}{2} + \frac{k + 1}{2k} \right \rfloor = \frac{(k+1)(k+2)}{2} \]which completes the induction.
To prove that $r = \frac{1}{2}$ is achievable. Take the sequence $b_k = \frac{k(k+1)}{2}$ for all $k \in \mathbb{N}$.
\[ \lim_{n \to \infty} \frac{b_n}{n^2} = \lim_{n \to \infty} \frac{n+1}{2n} = \frac{1}{2} \]
It suffices to prove that for any positive reals $0 < r < \frac{1}{2}$, we can have
\[ \lim_{n \to \infty} \frac{b_n}{n^2} = r \]This is possible by taking $b_n = \lceil rn^2 \rceil + n$ for some $n > N$ and $b_n = \frac{n(n+1)}{2}$, when $n \le N$. We'll first prove that such sequence satisfy.

Now, we'll prove that such sequence $b_k$ satisfies
\[ \frac{b_k}{k^2} > \frac{b_{k+1}}{(k+1)^2} \]By expanding, we want to prove that
\[ (k+1)^2k + (k+1)^2 \lceil rk^2 \rceil > k^2(k+1) + k^2 \lceil r(k+1)^2 \rceil \]\[ k(k+1) + (k+1)^2 \lceil rk^2 \rceil > k^2 \lceil r(k+1)^2 \rceil \]But actually,
\begin{align*}
 (k+1)^2 \lceil rk^2 \rceil &> (k+1)^2 (rk^2) \\ &= k^2 (r(k+1)^2 + 1) - k^2 \\ &> k^2 \lceil r(k+1)^2 \rceil - k^2
\end{align*}which is true.
Now, we need to find a constraint for $N$. Since $b_n = \frac{n(n+1)}{2}$ for all $n \le N$. Then we have $b_{N + 1} < \frac{(N+1)(N+2)}{2}$ as well. This gives us
\[ \lceil r(N+1)^2 \rceil  + N + 1 < \frac{(N+1)(N+2)}{2} \]But for large enough $N$, we must have
\[ \lceil r(N+1)^2 \rceil + N + 1 < r(N+1)^2 + N + 1 < \frac{1}{2} N^2 + \frac{3}{2}N + 1 \]as $r < \frac{1}{2}$.
We are hence finished.
Now,
\[ \lim_{n \to \infty} \frac{b_n}{n^2} = \lim_{n \to \infty} \frac{\lceil rn^2 \rceil + n}{n^2} = r \]because
\[ r = \lim_{n \to \infty} \frac{ rn^2 + n}{n^2} \le \lim_{n \to \infty} \frac{ \lceil rn^2 \rceil + n}{n^2} \le \lim_{n \to \infty} \frac{rn^2 + n + 1}{n^2} = r \]
Motivation
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pad
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#8 • 3 Y
Y by centslordm, 554183, Adventure10
Solution

Remarks
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niyu
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#9 • 2 Y
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We claim all $0 \leq r \leq \frac{1}{2}$ work.

We first prove that all $r$ are in this range. To do so, we will prove that $b_n \leq \frac{n^2 + n}{2}$ for all $n$. We do so by induction on $n$. As the base case, we have $b_1 = 1 = \frac{1^2 + 1}{2}$. Now, suppose $b_k \leq \frac{k^2 + k}{2}$. We have
\begin{align*}
        \frac{b_{k + 1}}{(k + 1)^2} &< \frac{b_k}{k^2} \\
        &< \frac{k^2 + k}{2k^2} \\
        &< \frac{k + 1}{2k} \\
        b_{k + 1} &< \frac{(k + 1)^3}{2k} \\
        b_{k + 1} &< \frac{k^2}{2} + \frac{3k}{2} + \frac{3}{2} + \frac{1}{2k}.
\end{align*}However, note that
\begin{align*}
        \frac{(k + 1)^2 + (k + 1)}{2} &= \frac{k^2 + 3k + 2}{2} \\
        &< \frac{k^2}{2} + \frac{3k}{2} + \frac{3}{2} + \frac{1}{2k} \\
        \frac{(k + 1)^2 + (k + 1)}{2} + 1 &= \frac{k^2 + 3k + 4}{2} \\
        &\geq \frac{k^2}{2} + \frac{3k}{2} + \frac{3}{2}k + \frac{1}{2k},
\end{align*}which is enough to show that $b_{k + 1} \leq \frac{(k + 1)^2 + (k + 1)}{2}$, completing the induction.

Hence, we have $\frac{b_n}{n^2} \leq \frac{1}{2} + \frac{1}{2n}$. As $n$ approaches infinity, the right side approaches $\frac{1}{2}$, showing that $r \leq \frac{1}{2}$. Clearly $\frac{b_n}{n^2} \geq \frac{1}{n^2}$, which approaches $0$ as $n$ approaches infinity. Hence, $r \geq 0$, showing that $0 \leq r \leq \frac{1}{2}$.

We now show that all $0 < r < \frac{1}{2}$ work (we have already provided constructions for $r = 0, \frac{1}{2}$). Consider some fixed $r$, and the sequence $b_n$ for which $b_n = \frac{n^2 + n}{2}$ if $rn^2 + n < \frac{n^2 + n}{2} + 100$ (this is false for large enough $n$ since $r < \frac{1}{2}$), and $b_n = \lceil rn^2 + n \rceil$ otherwise. This sequence satisfies $b_n \leq \frac{n^2 + n}{2}$ for all $n$ (which is necessary as $\frac{n^2 + n}{2}$ is the maximum value of $b_n$). We now show that
\begin{align*}
        \frac{b_n}{n^2} &> \frac{b_{n + 1}}{(n + 1)^2}
\end{align*}for all $n$. If $b_n = \frac{n^2 + n}{2}$ and $b_{n + 1} = \frac{(n + 1)^2 + (n + 1)}{2}$ this is true (as checked above). Otherwise, if $b_n = \frac{n^2 + n} {2}$ and $b_{n + 1} = \lceil r(n + 1)^2 + (n + 1) \rceil$, this is true because we have
\begin{align*}
        \frac{b_n}{n^2} &= \frac{\frac{n^2 + n}{2}}{n^2} \\
        &> \frac{\frac{(n + 1)^2 + (n + 1)}{2}}{(n + 1)^2} \\
        &> \frac{\lceil r(n + 1)^2 + (n + 1) \rceil}{(n + 1)^2} \\
        &= \frac{b_{n + 1}}{(n + 1)^2}.
\end{align*}Finally, suppose $b_n = \lceil rn^2 + n \rceil$ and $\lceil r(n + 1)^2 + (n + 1) \rceil$. We have
\begin{align*}
        \frac{rn^2 + n}{n^2} &> \frac{r(n + 1)^2 + (n + 1) + 1}{(n + 1)^2} \\
        \iff \frac{1}{n} &> \frac{n + 2}{(n + 1)^2} \\
        \iff (n + 1)^2 &> n(n + 2),
\end{align*}which is true. Thus, we have
\begin{align*}
        \frac{\lceil rn^2 + n \rceil}{n^2} &\geq \frac{rn^2 + n}{n^2} \\
        &> \frac{r(n + 1)^2 + (n + 1) + 1}{(n + 1)^2} \\
        &> \frac{\lceil r(n + 1)^2 + (n + 1) \rceil}{(n + 1)^2},
\end{align*}or $\frac{b_n}{n^2} > \frac{b_{n + 1}}{(n + 1)^2}$. Thus, this sequence satisfies the given condition. As the infimum of $\frac{b_n}{n^2}$ for this sequence is $r$, we may conclude that all $0 \leq r \leq \frac{1}{2}$ are achievable, as claimed.

This completes the proof.
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stamatelos
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#10 • 2 Y
Y by centslordm, Mango247
What is the logic behind bn<n(n+1)/2? you find it by try and error or its a method yo find it?
This post has been edited 2 times. Last edited by stamatelos, Jun 29, 2020, 8:00 PM
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jj_ca888
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#11 • 3 Y
Y by centslordm, Mango247, Mango247
stamatelos wrote:
What is the logic behind bn<n(n+1)/2? you find it by try and error or its a method yo find it?

Short answer: Trial and Error

Long answer: I think this is quite intuitive. When I did this problem I first listed out values of $b_i$'s.

Note that $b_1 = 1$. Then, we need $\tfrac{b_2}{4} < 1$ so the maximum possible value of $b_2$ is $3$. Then, we need $\tfrac{b_3}{9} < \tfrac34$ which yields the maximum possible value of $b_3$ is $6$. Then, we need $\tfrac{b_4}{16} < \tfrac69$ so the maximum possible value (after some computation) of $b_4$ is $10$.

So the maximum possible value of the first four $b_i$'s follows the sequence $1, 3, 6, 10$. Hopefully this looks familiar. After noting the (quite obvious) pattern at this point, you should be ready to induct.
This post has been edited 4 times. Last edited by jj_ca888, Jun 29, 2020, 8:06 PM
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smartninja2000
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#13 • 1 Y
Y by centslordm
Wait, this seems similar to some CMC 10A problem...
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arvind_r
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#14 • 1 Y
Y by centslordm
Why does $r < 0$ not work? (i.e. what if the $b_i$'s are negative?)
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GorgonMathDota
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#15 • 3 Y
Y by cosmicgenius, arvind_r, centslordm
arvind_r wrote:
Why does $r < 0$ not work? (i.e. what if the $b_i$'s are negative?)


a1267ab wrote:
Choose positive integers $b_1, b_2 \dots$
Your welcome
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mathlogician
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#16 • 2 Y
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The answer is $0 \leq r \leq 1/2$.

Proof of Necessity: Choose the $(b_i)$ to be as large as possible. Now I claim that $b_n = n(n+1)/2$ for all positive integers $n$, by induction. Note that if $b_n = \frac{n(n+1)}{2}$, it remains to show that $b_{n+1} = \frac{(n+1)(n+2)}{2}$ works but $b_{n+1} = \frac{(n+1)(n+2)}{2}+1$ fails. Therefore, it suffices to show $$\frac{(n+1)(n+2)}{(n+1)^2} \leq\frac{n(n+1)}{n^2} \leq \frac{(n+1)(n+2)+2}{(n+1)^2}.$$
The left inequality expands to $n(n+2)\leq (n+1)^2$, while the right inequality expands to $(n+1)^3 \leq n(n^2+3n+4)$, or $n^3+3n^2+3n+1 \leq n^3+3n^2+4n \implies 1 \leq n$, obvious.

Now obviously $\frac{b_n}{n^2} \leq \frac{n(n+1)}{2n^2} = \frac{n+1}{2n}$, so $r \leq 1/2$.

Construction: It remains to show that any $r$ for $0 \leq r \leq 1/2$ is achievable for some choice of $(b_i)$. Set $b_n = \left\lceil rn^2 + n\right\rceil$ if $\frac{\left\lceil rn^2 + n\right\rceil}{n^2} < \frac{1}{2}$, and set $b_n = n(n+1)/2$ otherwise. It suffices to show that $b_n/n^2 > b_{n+1}/(n+1)^2$, as this sequence will tend towards $r$ for large $n$. One may manually check that this construction works, as desired.
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IAmTheHazard
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#17 • 1 Y
Y by centslordm
The answer is $r \in [0,\tfrac{1}{2}]$.
I will first prove necessity. Clearly, $r \geq 0$, so we only have to prove $r \leq \tfrac{1}{2}$. This is established with the following claim.

Claim: For all $n$, we have $b_n\leq \tfrac{1}{2}n(n+1)$.
Proof: Use induction on $n$, with the base case of $n=1$ being clear. Suppose now that we have $b_n \leq \tfrac{1}{2}n(n+1)$. I will show that $b_{n+1} \leq \tfrac{1}{2}n(n+1)$. We require:
$$\frac{b_n}{n^2}>\frac{b_{n+1}}{(n+1)^2} \implies \frac{\tfrac{1}{2}n(n+1)}{n^2}=\frac{n+1}{2n}>\frac{b_{n+1}}{(n+1)^2}.$$From here, it's not hard to verify that all $b_{n+1} \geq \tfrac{1}{2}n(n+1)+1$ fail this requirement, thus completing the induction. This clearly implies $r\leq \tfrac{1}{2}$.

It remains to provide a construction. For $r=\tfrac{1}{2}$, we can take $b_n=\tfrac{1}{2}n(n+1)$, which gives $\tfrac{b_n}{n}=\tfrac{1}{2}+\tfrac{1}{2n}$ for all $n$. This is clearly valid.
Now we deal with $r<\tfrac{1}{2}$. For some arbitrary $r \in [0,\tfrac{1}{2})$, consider the sequence $(a_n)$ defined by $a_n=\lceil rn^2\rceil+n$. It is clear that for sufficiently large $n$, we have
$$a_n\leq rn^2+n+1<\tfrac{1}{2}n(n+1).$$So we can take some positive integer $N$ such that for all $N\geq n$, $a_n<\tfrac{1}{2}n(n+1)$. Then define
$$b_n=\begin{cases} \frac{1}{2}n(n+1)& n<N\\ a_n & n\geq N.\end{cases}$$Observe that
$$\frac{b_n}{n^2}\geq \frac{a_n}{n^2}=\frac{\lceil rn^2\rceil+n}{n^2}\geq \frac{rn^2}{n^2}=r,$$so we have $\tfrac{b_n}{n^2} \geq r$ for all $n \geq 1$. Since $\lim_{n \to \infty} \tfrac{b_n}{n^2}=r$, it follows that $r$ is maximal. Hence we only have to verify that $\tfrac{b_n}{n^2}>\tfrac{b_{n+1}}{(n+1)^2}$ for all $n \geq 1$. This was already proven for all $n<N-1$ and is clear for $n=N-1$, so we only have to prove it for $n \geq N$. It suffices to show that
$$\frac{a_n}{n^2}>\frac{a_{n+1}}{(n+1)^2} \iff \frac{\lceil rn^2\rceil+n}{n^2}>\frac{\lfloor r(n+1)^2\rfloor+n}{(n+1)^2}$$holds for all $n \geq N$. We have:
\begin{align*}
\frac{\lceil rn^2\rceil+n}{n^2}&>\frac{\lceil r(n+1)^2\rceil+(n+1)}{(n+1)^2}&&\iff\\
(n+1)^2\lceil rn^2\rceil+n(n+1)^2&>n^2\lceil r(n+1)^2\rceil +n^2(n+1)&&\iff\\
n^2+n&>n^2\lceil r(n+1)^2\rceil-(n+1)^2\lceil rn^2\rceil&&\iff\\
n^2+n&>n^2(r(n+1)^2+\{1-r(n+1)^2\})-(n+1)^2(rn^2+\{1-rn^2\})&&\iff\\
n^2+n&>n^2\{1-r(n+1)^2\}-(n+1)^2\{1-rn^2\},
\end{align*}where we use the easily verifiable identity $\lceil x \rceil=x+\{1-x\}$ to get from the third line to the fourth.
Note that we have $n^2\{1-r(n+1)\}<n^2$, and $(n+1)^2\{1-rn^2\}$ must be nonnegative, so
$$n^2\{1-r(n+1)^2\}-(n+1)^2\{1-rn^2\}>n^2.$$As $n^2+n>n^2$, the original inequality is true, so we indeed have $\tfrac{b_n}{n^2}>\tfrac{b_{n+1}}{(n+1)^2}$ for all $n$. Hence, this construction for $r$ works, and we're done. $\blacksquare$
This post has been edited 1 time. Last edited by IAmTheHazard, Jun 7, 2021, 6:45 PM
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somewhere123
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为什么我无法下载这个文档,帮帮我
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Apple321
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somewhere123 wrote:
为什么我无法下载这个文档,帮帮我

Why can't you download the document?

I'm not sure what document your talking about..
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508669
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a1267ab wrote:
Choose positive integers $b_1, b_2, \dotsc$ satisfying
\[1=\frac{b_1}{1^2} > \frac{b_2}{2^2} > \frac{b_3}{3^2} > \frac{b_4}{4^2} > \dotsb\]and let $r$ denote the largest real number satisfying $\tfrac{b_n}{n^2} \geq r$ for all positive integers $n$. What are the possible values of $r$ across all possible choices of the sequence $(b_n)$?

Carl Schildkraut and Milan Haiman

Posting for storage.

We see that if $b_n \leq \frac{n(n+1)}{2}$, then $b_{n+1}^2 < \dfrac{(n+1)^2b_n}{n^2} \leq \frac{(n+1)^3}{2n} = \dfrac{n^3 + 3n^2 + 3n + 1}{2n} = \dfrac{(n+1)(n+2)}{2} + \frac{n+1}{2n} \implies b_{n+1} \leq \dfrac{(n+1)(n+2)}{2}$ and $b_1 = \frac{1 \cdot 2}{2}$. This means that $\frac{b_n}{n^2} \leq \frac{n+1}{2n}$ which can be $\frac{1}{2} + \epsilon$ where $\epsilon$ is an arbitrarily small positive real number. This means that $r \leq \frac{1}{2}$.

We claim that all reals $r \in [0, \frac{1}{2}]$ work. Simply choose $b_n = \lceil rk^2 + k \rceil$ if $\lceil rk^2 + k \rceil < \frac{k^2}{2}$ or $b_k = \frac{k(k+1)}{2}$ otherwise. Simply because $\lceil rk^2 + k \rceil < \frac{k^2}{2}$ may not be true for all positive integers $k$. We can see that this construction indeed works.
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FishHeadTail
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I wonder what’s the motivation behind looking at $\lceil cn^2 \rceil +n$. Thanks a lot!
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mathlogician
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FishHeadTail wrote:
I wonder what’s the motivation behind looking at $\lceil cn^2 \rceil +n$. Thanks a lot!

Here's how I came up with it (might be already mentioned in the thread). We need $cn^2$ so the limit of $(b_n)$ approaches $c$. However $c$ can be any real number, so we use the ceiling. However, $b_n = \lceil{cn^2 \rceil}$ still doesn't work, so we can add a linear term, knowing that the limit is still $c$ but $\tfrac{b_n}{n^2}$ is decreasing. There is one more issue: the initial terms are too large, but this is an easy fix as we can just replace them with triangular numbers, the end.
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guillermo.dinamarca
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a1267ab wrote:
Choose positive integers $b_1, b_2, \dotsc$ satisfying
\[1=\frac{b_1}{1^2} > \frac{b_2}{2^2} > \frac{b_3}{3^2} > \frac{b_4}{4^2} > \dotsb\]and let $r$ denote the largest real number satisfying $\tfrac{b_n}{n^2} \geq r$ for all positive integers $n$. What are the possible values of $r$ across all possible choices of the sequence $(b_n)$?

Carl Schildkraut and Milan Haiman
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megarnie
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Note $b_1=1$.

We claim the answer is $\boxed{0\le r\le \frac{1}{2}}$.

Part 1: Show that $r=\frac{1}{2}$ works, and that it is maximal.
For $\frac{1}{2}$, set $b_n=\frac{n^2+n}{2}$, which is always an integer. So $\frac{b_n}{n^2}=\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{2n}$. The sequence $\frac{1}{2n}$ will converge to $0$, so $\frac{b_n}{n^2}$ will converge to $\frac{1}{2}$.

Now we will show that $\frac{1}{2}$ is maximal. We will use the following claim.

Claim: $\frac{b_n}{n^2}\le \frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{2n}$, which obviously proves the first part.
Proof: We will use induction.
Base case(s): $n=1,2$ ($n=2$ because the maximal value for $\frac{b_2}{2^2}$ is $\frac{3}{4}=\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{4})$.

Inductive step: Suppose $\frac{b_k}{k^2}\le \frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{2k}\forall k<n$. Then we suppose for the sake of contradiction that $\frac{b_n}{n^2}>\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{2n}$. Since $b_n$ and $n$ are both positive integers, the minimum value for $\frac{b_n}{n^2}$ is $\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{2n}+\frac{1}{n^2}$.

This gives us the inequality $\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{2n}+\frac{1}{n^2}<\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{2n-2}\implies \frac{1}{2n}+\frac{1}{n^2}=\frac{n+2}{2n^2}<\frac{1}{2n-2}$. Multiplying both sides by $2n^2$ gives $n+2<\frac{n^2}{n-1}$. Since $n>1$, multiplying both sides by $n-1$ gives $(n+2)(n-1)<n^2\implies n^2+n-2<n^2\implies n-2<0$, a contradiction as $n\ge 2$.



Part 2: Show that all $0\le r<\frac{1}{2}$ work.
Obviously we can set $b_i=i\forall i$, which gives $r=0$, so henceforth assume $0<r<\frac{1}{2}$.

Let $N$ be a sufficiently large value so that for all $k\ge N$, $\left\lceil rk^2+k\right\rceil<\frac{k^2+k}{2}$.

Let $b_k=\left\lceil rk^2+k \right\rceil\forall k\ge N$ and $b_n=\frac{n^2+n}{2}\forall k<N$.

Clearly $\frac{b_k}{k^2}$ converges to $\frac{rk^2+k+c}{k^2}=r+\frac{1}{k}+\frac{c}{k^2}$, where $c<1$. Since both $\frac{1}{k}$ and $\frac{c}{k^2}$ converge to $0$, $\frac{b_k}{k^2}$ converges to $r$. It suffices to show that it's strictly decreasing.

For all $n<N$, $\frac{b_n}{n^2}=\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{2n}$, which is strictly decreasing.

We note $\frac{b_{N-1}}{(N-1)^2}=\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{2N-2}>\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{2N}>\frac{b_{N}}{N^2}$.

Thus, it suffices to show that for all $k\ge N$, $\frac{b_k}{k^2}>\frac{b_{k+1}}{(k+1)^2}$. We have \[\frac{b_k}{k^2}=\frac{\left\lceil rk^2+k\right\rceil}{k^2}\ge\frac{rk^2+k}{k^2}\]
Claim: $\frac{rk^2+k}{k^2}>\frac{r(k+1)^2+(k+1)+1}{(k+1)^2}$. If we have proven this, we are done as $\frac{r(k+1)^2+(k+1)+1}{(k+1)^2}>\frac{b_{k+1}}{(k+1)^2}$
Proof: AFTSOC $\frac{rk^2+k}{k^2}\le \frac{r(k+1)^2+(k+1)+1}{(k+1)^2}$. Then $r+\frac{1}{k}\le r+\frac{1}{k+1}+\frac{1}{(k+1)^2}\implies \frac{1}{k}\le \frac{1}{k+1}+\frac{1}{(k+1)^2}=\frac{k+2}{(k+1)^2}$.

Multiplying both sides by $k(k+1)^2$ gives $(k+1)^2\le k(k+2)\implies k^2+2k+1\le k^2+2k$, which is absurd.
This post has been edited 1 time. Last edited by megarnie, Dec 28, 2021, 8:23 PM
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asdf334
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After getting the upper and lower bounds on $r$, another approach would be to pick any arbitrary value of $r$ and an arbitrarily large $k$, then set $b_k$ as the smallest integer satisfying $\frac{b_k}{k^2}>r$ and move "backward", picking the smallest fraction greater than the previous, and show that this works via contradiction.
This post has been edited 2 times. Last edited by asdf334, Jan 15, 2022, 3:44 PM
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Inconsistent
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The answer is all reals between $0$ and $\frac{1}{2}$. Upper bound is trivial by thinking. Construction is to stay on the upper bound construction until you are able to switch to $b_n = \lceil rn^2 \rceil + n$, finishing.
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EthanWYX2009
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引理: 对于 $\forall n\in\mathbb Z_+$, 都有 $b_n\leqslant\frac 12n(n+1)$.
我们运用数学归纳法证明该引理. 由已知 $n=1$ 时结论成立. 假设对于 $n>1$, 结论对于 $n-1$ 成立, 则有
$$b_n<\frac{n^2}{(n-1)^2}b_{n-1}\leqslant\frac{n^2}{(n-1)^2}\cdot\frac 12n(n-1)=\frac{n^3}{2(n-1)}<\frac{n(n+1)}{2}+1$$结合 $b_n\in\mathbb Z$,$b_n\leqslant\frac 12n(n+1)$, 归纳成立.
回到原题, 由引理知 $r\leqslant\frac{b_n}{n^2}\leqslant\frac 12+\frac 1{2n}$, 因此 $r\leqslant\frac 12$. 对于数列 $b_n=\frac 12n(n+1)$,$r=\frac 12$; 对于数列 $b_n\equiv 1$,$r=0$.
对于 $0<r<\frac 12$,$N\in\mathbb Z_+$, 使得 $n\geq N$ 时, 都有 $\left\lceil rn^2+n\right\rceil <\frac 12n(n+1)$.
取数列 $b_n=\frac 12n(n+1)$, $1\leq n<N$; $b_n=\left\lceil rn^2+n\right\rceil$, $n\geq N$.$\lim_{n\to +\infty}\frac {b_n}{n^2}=r$.
综上所述, ${r}$ 的取值范围为 $\boxed{\left[0,\frac 12\right]}$.$\blacksquare$
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john0512
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#29
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We claim that the answer is $0\leq r\leq 1/2.$

Claim 1: $$b_n\leq \frac{n(n+1)}{2}.$$We will use induction. Clearly, this is true for $n=1,2,3.$ We will use induction. Suppose that $$b_k\leq \frac{k(k+1)}{2}$$for some $k\geq 3$. Then, $$b_{k+1}<b_k\frac{(k+1)^2}{k^2}\leq \frac{(k+1)^3}{2k}.$$
Case 1: $k$ is even. Then, $$\frac{(k+1)^3}{2k}=\frac{k^2}{2}+\frac{3k}{2}+\frac{3}{2}+\frac{1}{2k}.$$The first two terms will be integers if $k\geq 3$ and $k$ is even, so its floor is $$\frac{k^2}{2}+\frac{3k}{2}+1=\frac{(k+1)(k+2)}{2},$$and since $$b_{k+1}\leq \lfloor \frac{(k+1)^3}{2k}\rfloor,$$this case is resolved.

Case 2: $k$ is odd. Then, let $k=2s-1$, so $$b_{k+1}\leq \lfloor \frac{(k+1)^3}{2k}\rfloor =\lfloor \frac{4s^3}{2s-1}\rfloor=\lfloor 2s^2+s+\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{4s-2}\rfloor=2s^2+s,$$which is what we want. Hence, we have shown the claim.

This clearly shows that $r\leq 1/2$. It also shows that $r=1/2$ is achievable since we can just set $b_n=\frac{n(n+1)}{2}.$

Clearly, $r\geq 0$. Furthermore, $r=0$ achievable by $b_n=1$. It remains to show that $0<r<1/2$ is achievable.

Claim 2: If $0<r<1/2$ is a real number, then $$\frac{\lceil rn^2 \rceil +n}{n^2}$$is decreasing with respect to $n$ when $n$ is a positive integer. This is just showing that $$\frac{\lceil rn^2 \rceil +n}{n^2}>\frac{\lceil r(n+1)^2 \rceil +n+1}{(n+1)^2}.$$Note that we have $$\lceil rn^2 \rceil\geq rn^2$$and $$\lceil r(n+1)^2\rceil < r(n+1)^2+1,$$so it suffices to show that $$\frac{rn^2 +n}{n^2}>\frac{r(n+1)^2+1 +n+1}{(n+1)^2}.$$This is just $$\frac{1}{n}>\frac{n+2}{(n+1)^2}$$$$(n+1)^2>n(n+2),$$which is clearly true.

Note that $$\lim_{n\rightarrow \infty}\frac{\lceil rn^2 \rceil +n}{n^2}=r,$$and furthermore, $$\frac{\lceil rn^2 \rceil +n}{n^2}>r$$for all $n$. Thus, if $r<1/2$, we can first do $b_n= \frac{n(n+1)}{2}$ for sufficiently many terms, and then swap over to $$b_n=\frac{\lceil rn^2 \rceil +n}{n^2}$$and do that for the rest of the way to achieve $r$ (this works if we go sufficiently far since it goes from larger to 1/2 to below 1/2 during the transition if we wait sufficiently long, since it heads towards $r<1/2$), so we are done.
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naonaoaz
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#31
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Obviously $r \ge 0$, with equality achievable by $b_i = 1$ for all $i$.

Similarly, note that $r \le \frac{1}{2}$. To see this, we can imagine starting with $b_1 = 1$ and greedily picking the largest possible $b_2,b_3,\ldots$. It's clear this greedy strategy will give the largest possible $r$.

Using this greedy method, induction shows that $b_n = {{n+1} \choose 2}$ for all $n \ge 1$. Then taking $\lim_{n \to \infty} \frac{b_n}{n^2} = \frac{1}{2}$ finishes. Furthermore, this implies $b_n \le {{n+1} \choose 2}$ for any sequence $b_i$.
Claim: All $r \in \left[0,\frac{1}{2}\right]$ are achievable.
Proof: We've already shown $0$ and $\frac{1}{2}$ are achievable. Consider $a_n = \left \lceil{rn^2}\right \rceil+n$. Clearly, $\lim_{n \to \infty} \frac{a_n}{n^2} = r$. We claim that
\begin{align*}
        b_n &= {{n+1} \choose 2} \text{ for $n \le N$} \\
        b_n &= \left \lceil{rn^2}\right \rceil+n \text{ else}
    \end{align*}for some sufficiently large $N$ works as a sequence. First, to determine $N$, just take any $n$ such that
\[\frac{1}{1-2r} < \frac{n^2}{n+2} \text{ which implies } \left \lceil{rn^2}\right \rceil+n < \text{max $b_n$} = {{n+1} \choose 2}\]Secondly, it's not hard to verify that, when $n>N$, the sequence $\frac{b_n}{n^2}$ is decreasing as desired. Thus since these two conditions are met, this sequence $b_n$ works, and we're done. $\square$
Remark:
The actually checking of the inequality is omitted as it's not difficult or useful. However, a small note: to actually verify the inequalities, use $\left \lceil{x}\right \rceil \ge x$ and $ x+1 \ge \left \lceil{x}\right \rceil$.
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YaoAOPS
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#32
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Note that $b_i = 1$.
We have that for $j > i$ \[ b_{j} \le \left\lfloor \frac{(j)^2}{i^2} \cdot b_j \right\rfloor \]Note that the inequality is the tightest when $j = i + 1$
Consider the maximal possible value of $r$, which occurs when equality holds between $i, j = i + 1$. We claim that this value is $\frac{1}{2}$.
We have that \[ b_{i+1} = \left\lfloor \frac{(i+1)^2}{i^2} \cdot b_i \right\rfloor = b_i + \left\lfloor \frac{2}{i} b_i \right\rfloor \]Thus, if $i \mid 2b_i$, then $b_{i+1} = \frac{i + 2}{i}b_i$.
Since $b_1 = 1$, we can inductively solve to get $b_2 = 3$, $b_3 = 6$, $b_n = \frac{n(n+1)}{2}$ and as $n \to \infty$, $\frac{b_n}{n^2} \to \frac{1}{2}$.
Claim: If $r$ is the maximal for a fixed $b_i$, then $\frac{b_i}{i^2} - r \le C_j = \sum_{j=i}^{\infty} \frac{1}{j^2}$
Proof. Take $b_{i+1}$ as maximal, repeat to get a decrease of at most $C_j$. $\blacksquare$
Now, define $b_i$ inductively as maximal values such that $\frac{b_i}{i^2} < \frac{b_{i-1}}{(i-1)^2}$, jumping down to $b_i = \left\lceil i^2 (r + C_i) \right\rceil$ whenever $\frac{b_{i-1}}{(i-1)^2} > \frac{1}{i-1} + r + C_i$.
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cursed_tangent1434
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#33 • 1 Y
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We claim that the only real constants $r$ for which such a sequence of positive integers exist are $0 \le r \le \frac{1}{2}$. We start off with proving the bound.

It is not hard to see that $r \ge 0$ since all the terms of the form $\frac{b_i}{i^2}$ are strictly positive. For the upper bound, we first note that, $b_1=1$. Further, we can show the following result via induction.

Claim : For all positive integers $i \ge 2$,
\[\frac{b_i}{i^2}\le \frac{i+1}{2i}\]

Since $b_1=1$ and $\frac{b_2}{4} < 1$ we have $b_2 <4$ and thus, $b_2 \le 3$ implying $\frac{b_2}{4} \le \frac{3}{4}$ as desired. Now, we assume that for some positive integer $k \ge 2$, $\frac{b_k}{k^2} \le \frac{k+1}{2k}$. Then,
\begin{align*}
\frac{b_{k+1}}{(k+1)^2} & < \frac{b_k}{k^2} \\
b_{k+1} & < \frac{(k+1)^3}{2k}\\
b_{k+1} & \ge \frac{(k+1)^3-1}{2k}\\
&= \frac{(k+1)^2+(k+1)+1}{2}\\
b_{k+1} & \ge \frac{k^2+3k+2}{2}\\
&= \frac{(k+1)(k+2)}{2}
\end{align*}using the fact that $b_{k+1} \in \mathbb{N}$. Thus, $b_{k+1} \le \frac{(k+1)(k+2)}{2}$ from which it follows that, $\frac{b_{k+1}}{(k+1)^2} \le \frac{k+2}{2(k+1)}$ completing the induction.

Now, if $r>\frac{1}{2}$, there must exist some $\epsilon >0$ and $k \in \mathbb{N}$ such that for all $i \ge k$, $b_i \ge \frac{1}{2} + \epsilon$. But now, considering $i > \frac{1}{2\epsilon}$ contradicts the above claim, which finishes the proof of the bound.

All that remains now is to provide a construction. When $r=0$ and $r=\frac{1}{2}$ simply consider the sequences $b_i=i$ and $b_i = \frac{i(i+1)}{2}$ respectively. For all $0 < r < \frac{1}{2}$ we can consider the sequence,
\[b_i= \begin{cases}
\frac{i(i+1)}{2} & i < N\\
\lceil ri^2+i \rceil & i \ge N
\end{cases}\]for sufficiently large $N$. To see why this works we let $c_i = \frac{b_i}{i^2}$ for all positive integers $i$, it is first clear that $c_1=1$ and $c_i$ is increasing for $1 \le i <  \frac{3}{1-2r}$. Then, we have two consecutive terms of the form,
\[c_{k-1} = \frac{k}{2(k-1)} \text{ and }  c_k = \frac{\lceil rk^2+k \rceil}{k^2}\]Note that,
\begin{align*}
c_k & = \frac{\lceil rk^2+k \rceil}{k^2} \\
& \le \frac{rk^2+k+1}{k^2}\\
& < \frac{k}{2(k-1)}\\
&= c_{k-1}
\end{align*}for sufficiently large $k$ (so we simply need to select $N$ such that the final inequality holds). Further, for all $i>k$, $c_i$ is also increasing since,
\begin{align*}
\frac{\lceil ri^2+i \rceil}{i^2} & >  \frac{ri^2 +i}{i^2}\\
& = r + \frac{1}{i}\\
& > r + \frac{i+2}{(i+1)^2}\\
& > \frac{r(i+1)^2 + (i+1) + 1}{(i+1)^2}\\
& > \frac{\lceil r(i+1)^2+ (i+1) \rceil}{(i+1)^2}
\end{align*}Thus, the described sequence satisfies all the desired characteristics. Further,
\[\frac{b_n}{n^2} = \frac{\lceil rn^2+n \rceil}{n^2}> r\]So, $r$ is a lower bound of $c_i$. To see why it is the greatest lower bound, say there exists some $\epsilon >0$ and $k \in \mathbb{N}$ such that for all $ i \ge k$ we have $c_i \ge r+ \epsilon$. Then, we have $\frac{\lceil ri^2+i \rceil}{i^2} > r + \epsilon$ so,
\begin{align*}
ri^2+i+1 & > \lceil ri^2+i \rceil > ri^2 + i^2 \epsilon\\
i+1 & > i^2 \epsilon
\end{align*}which is clearly false for sufficiently large $i$. Thus, $r$ is in fact the greatest lower bound of $c_i$ which completes the solution.
This post has been edited 1 time. Last edited by cursed_tangent1434, Jul 4, 2024, 5:48 AM
Reason: typoes
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Ywgh1
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#34
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We claim that $r \in [0,1/2]$.
We start off with the following claim.

Claim : $b_n \leq \frac{n(n+1)}{2}$ for all $n$.

Proof: We use induction, base case being $n=1$ is trivial. First assume that $b_{n-1} \leq \frac{n(n-1)}{2}$,
we show that $b_n \leq \frac{n(n+1)}{2}$.

\begin{align*}
b_{n} &<\frac{n(n-1)}{2}\cdot\frac{n^2}{(n-1)^2} \\
&= \frac{n^3-n}{2(n-1)} + \frac{n}{2(n-1)} \\
&< \frac{n(n+1)}{2}+1
\end{align*}As desired. $\blacksquare$

Now as $n \to \infty$ we get that
\[\frac{b_n}{n^2} \leq \frac{1}{2}\].

Now we give a construction of our bound.

Construction: Let $b_n = \left\lceil rn^2 + n\right\rceil$ if $\frac{\left\lceil rn^2 + n\right\rceil}{n^2} < \frac{1}{2}$, otherwise, let $b_n=\frac{n(n+1)}{2}$ .
Which works, hence we are done.
This post has been edited 5 times. Last edited by Ywgh1, Aug 15, 2024, 7:30 AM
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ihatemath123
3449 posts
#35
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The answer is $r \in [0, \tfrac{1}{2} ]$.

Claim: We have $b_i \leq \tfrac{i(i+1)}{2}$.
Proof: We prove this with induction, with the base case of $i=1$ being obvious. For $i > 1$, we have
\[b_i < \frac{i^2}{(i-1)^2} \cdot b_{i-1} \leq \frac{i^3}{2(i-1)} < \frac{i^2 + i + 2}{2},\]and since $\tfrac{i^2 + i + 1}{2}$ is not an integer, it follows that $b_i \leq \tfrac{i(i+1)}{2}$, as claimed.

So, we must have $r \leq \tfrac{1}{2}$. We now show that we can obtain every $r$ in this range. Note that the value of $\tfrac{b_i}{i^2}$ decreases by at most $\tfrac{1}{i^2}$ each time we increment $i$ by one. Therefore, if we define \[f(n) := \sum_{j=n}^\infty \frac{1}{j^2},\]we can always make our sequence converge to some real number at least $L_n = \tfrac{b_n}{n^2} - f(n+1)$. Now, we construct our sequence $b_i$ as follows: for each $i$, first, set each $b_i$ to be as large as possible until $L_i$ is greater than $r$ – this must eventually happen since $\lim_{i \to \infty} f(i) = 0$. Let the $i$-value at which this happens be $k$. We continue to increase $i$, making $b_i$ as large as possible – as we do so, the value of $L_i$ increases. We repeat this until $\tfrac{1}{i^2} < (L_k - r)/2$. (Note the $k$ subscript.) Next, instead of picking $b_i$ to be as large as possible, we first set it to its maximum value and then decrease it by $1$ until $L_i$ lies in the range $(r, (r+L_k)/2)$. (This is possible since, by assumption, $\tfrac{1}{i^2} < (L_k - r)/2$.) Now, we reset $k$ to be the current value of $i$ and repeat this process indefinitely. By doing this, $L_i - r$ approaches $0$, and since $\tfrac{b_i}{i^2} - L_i$ also approaches $0$, it follows that $\tfrac{b_i}{i^2}$ approaches $r$, as desired.
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Mathandski
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#36
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Subjective Rating (MOHs) $       $
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Trasher_Cheeser12321
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#37
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In order to find the maximum possible value for $r$, we need to try maximizing each value in the sequence.

Claim. $b_n$ must be the $n^\text{th}$ triangular number in order for the fraction to be maximized.

Proof. This can be proven using induction with our base cases being $b_1 = 1$ and $b_2 = 1+2 = 3$. With our inductive hypothesis, assume that $b_n = \frac{n(n+1)}{2}$. Using the condition given in the problem, $b_{n+1}$ must satisfy
\[ \frac{\frac{n(n+1)}{2}}{n^2} > \frac{b_{n+1}}{(n+1)^2} \]It can be easily verified that the inequality holds for $b_{n+1} = \frac{(n+1)(n+2)}{2}$. Now all there is left to show is that the condition doesn't hold up when $b_{n+1} = \frac{(n+1)(n+2)}{2}+1$. This can be shown with
\begin{align*}
\frac{n+1}{2n} &> \frac{\frac{(n+1)(n+2)}{2}+1}{(n+1)^2}\\
\frac{n+1}{2n} &> \frac{n^2+3n+2+2}{2(n+1)^2}\\
(n+1)^3 &> n^3 + 3n^2 + 4n
\end{align*}which is false since the statement simplifies to $1>n$ which is absurd. $\blacksquare$

Since $r$ is maximized when $b_n = \frac{n(n+1)}{2}$, we have that
\[ r \le \frac{n+1}{2n} \]for all $n$. As $n$ approaches infinity, we can conclude that $r \le \frac{1}{2}$. Since obviously $r\ge 0$, $r$ must lie in the interval $\left[0, \frac{1}{2}\right]$. The construction for any $r$ in this interval is done by defining
\[ b_n = \begin{cases} \frac{n(n+1)}{2} & \text{if } n \le N \\ \bigl{\lceil}rn^2 + n\bigl{\rceil} & \text{if } n > N \end{cases} \]for a sufficiently large $N$ satisfying $\frac{N(N+1)}{2} > \bigl{\lceil}rN^2 + N\bigl{\rceil} $. Lastly, since
\begin{align*}
\frac{\left\lceil rn^2 + n \right\rceil}{n^2} &\ge r + \frac{1}{n} > r + \frac{n+2}{(n+1)^2} = \frac{\left(r(n+1)^2 + (n+1)\right) + 1}{(n+1)^2} > \frac{\left\lceil r(n+1)^2 + (n+1) \right\rceil}{(n+1)^2}
\end{align*}we see that the condition $b_{n+1}>b_n$ still holds even for $n > N$ and the sequence approaches $r$ as $n$ tends to infinity. $\blacksquare$
This post has been edited 2 times. Last edited by Trasher_Cheeser12321, Dec 26, 2024, 5:49 PM
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aliz
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#38
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The answer is $\boxed{0 \le r \le \frac{1}{2}}$. Since $\frac{b_n}{n^2} \ge 0$, $r \ge 0$.

Claim: $b_n \le \frac{n(n+1)}{2}$
Proof: We will prove by induction. This is obvious for $n = 1$. If it holds true for $n = k$ and not $n = k+1$, then \[ \frac{\frac{k(k+1)}{2}}{k^2} \ge \frac{b_k}{k^2} > \frac{b_{k+1}}{(k+1)^2} \]so $\frac{(k+1)^3}{2k} > b_{k+1}$. Since we assume the claim does not hold for $n = k+1$, $b_{k+1} \ge \frac{k^2+3k+4}{2}$. Plugging this into $b_{k+1}$ and simplifying yields $k < 1$, contradiction.

Therefore $b_{k+1} \le \frac{(k+1)(k+2)}{2}$, and notice that if the two are equal, then \[ \frac{\frac{k(k+1)}{2}}{k^2} > \frac{\frac{(k+1)(k+2)}{2}}{(k+1)^2}. \]This simplifies to $1 > 0$ which is obviously true.

Since $\frac{b_k}{k^2} \le \frac{\frac{k(k+1)}{2}}{k^2} = \frac{1}{2} + \frac{1}{2k}$, $r$ is at max $\frac{1}{2}$. Now consider $0 \le r < 1/2$.

Claim: $\frac{b_n}{n^2} - r \le \frac{1}{n}$.
Proof: Let $b_{n+1}$ be the maximum integer such that $\frac{b_n}{n^2} > \frac{b_{n+1}}{(n+1)^2}$, so $\frac{b_{n+1} + 1}{(n+1)^2} \ge \frac{b_n}{n^2}$. Rearranging, \[ \frac{b_n}{n^2} - \frac{b_{n+1}}{(n+1)^2} \le \frac{1}{(n+1)^2} < \frac{1}{(n)(n+1)} = \frac{1}{n} - \frac{1}{n+1}. \]Noticing the telescoping sum, we put \[ \frac{b_n}{n^2} - r \le \sum_{p=n}^{\infty} \frac{1}{p} - \frac{1}{p+1} = \frac{1}{n}. \]
Now consider the construction where $b_1 = 1$ and for $k > 1$, $b_k$ is the minimum positive integer value such that $\frac{b_k}{k^2} - r \ge \frac{1}{k}$. Since $\frac{b_k - 1}{k^2} - r < \frac{1}{k}, \frac{b_k}{k^2} - r < \frac{1}{k} + \frac{1}{k^2}$ so if this sequence exists, it converges to $r$.

Also, \[ \left( \frac{b_{k+1}}{(k+1)^2} - \frac{b_k}{k^2} \right) + \left( \frac{b_k}{k^2} - r \right)  \ge \frac{1}{n} - \left( \frac{1}{n} - \frac{1}{n+1} \right) = \frac{1}{n+1} \]so since a value of $b_{k+1}$ can be found and it must be a positive (bounded from below) integer, we can find a minimum value of $b_{k+1}$. Therefore this creates a valid sequence.

Therefore all values $0 \le r \le \frac{1}{2}$ can be possible infimums and all other values are impossible.
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blueprimes
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#39
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We claim the answer is $0 \le r \le \dfrac{1}{2}$, the lower bound is obvious.

$\textbf{Claim 1:}$ $r \le \dfrac{1}{2}$ and is precisely the maxima.

We greedily choose $b_k$ according to the recurrence $b_{k + 1} = \left\lfloor \dfrac{(k + 1)^2}{k^2} b_k \right\rfloor$. We will show that in fact, $b_n = \dfrac{n(n + 1)}{2}$ by induction.

The base case is obvious, now assuming up to an arbitrary $n$ to show for $n + 1$ we require
\[ \dfrac{(n + 1)(n + 2)}{2}  = \left \lfloor \dfrac{(n + 1)^3}{2n} \right \rfloor \iff \dfrac{(n + 1)(n + 2)}{2} \le \dfrac{(n + 1)^3}{2n} < \dfrac{(n + 1)(n + 2)}{2} + 1.\]Expanding gives $n^3 + 3n^2 + 2n \le n^3 + 3n^2 + 3n + 1 < n^3 + 3n^2 + 4n$ which is true.

Now $\dfrac{b_n}{n^2} = \dfrac{1}{2} + \dfrac{1}{2n}$ which obviously approaches $\dfrac{1}{2}$ as $n$ grows large.

$\textbf{Claim 2:}$ All values $0 \le r \le \dfrac{1}{2}$ are obtainable.

Consider the sequence $b_n = \dfrac{n(n + 1)}{2}$ for $n \le K - 1$ and $b_n = \lceil rn^2 \rceil + n$ for $n \ge K$ where $K$ is sufficiently large enough such that $\dfrac{b_n}{n^2} > r$. We claim that this construction works. Indeed,
\[ r < \dfrac{\lceil rn^2 \rceil + n}{n^2} < \dfrac{rn^2 + n + 1}{n^2} = r + \dfrac{1}{n} + \dfrac{1}{n^2}\]so $\lim_{n \to \infty} \dfrac{b_n}{n^2} = r$. Moreover,
\[ \dfrac{\lceil rn^2 \rceil + n}{n^2} > \dfrac{\lceil r(n + 1)^2 \rceil + (n + 1)}{(n + 1)^2} \iff (n + 1)^2 \lceil rn^2 \rceil + n^2 + n > n^2 \lceil r(n + 1)^2 \rceil .\]
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shendrew7
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#40
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Our answer is $\boxed{[0,\tfrac 12]}$, constructed with $b_n = 1$ and $b_n = \tfrac{n(n+1)}{2}$, which can be easily shown to be the extremes.

For the values in between, it suffices to find an expression of the form
\[\frac{b_n}{n^2} = \frac{\lceil rn^2+sn+t \rceil}{n^2}\]
for sufficiently high $n$ (where we just set $b_n = \tfrac{n(n+1)}{2}$ before that), which asymptotically approaches $r$ from above. It suffices to have
\[\frac{\lceil rn^2+sn+t \rceil}{n^2} > \frac{\lceil r(n+1)^2+s(n+1)+t \rceil}{(n+1)^2},\]
which suffices to have
\[\frac{rn^2+sn+t}{n^2} > \frac{r(n+1)^2+s(n+1)+t+1}{(n+1)^2}\]\[s(n^2+n) + t(2t+1) > n^2.\]
Setting $s=1$ and $t=0$ works. $\blacksquare$
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