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k a April Highlights and 2025 AoPS Online Class Information
jlacosta   0
Apr 2, 2025
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0 replies
jlacosta
Apr 2, 2025
0 replies
Combinatorial Sum
P162008   0
a few seconds ago
Evaluate $\sum_{n=0}^{\infty} \frac{2^n + 1}{(2n + 1) \binom{2n}{n}}$
0 replies
P162008
a few seconds ago
0 replies
Combinatorial Sum
P162008   0
7 minutes ago
$\frac{\sum_{r=0}^{24} \binom{100}{4r} \binom{100}{4r + 2}}{\sum_{r=1}^{25} \binom{200}{8r - 6}}$ is equal to
0 replies
P162008
7 minutes ago
0 replies
binomial sum ratio
thewayofthe_dragon   3
N an hour ago by P162008
Source: YT
Someone please evaluate this ratio inside the log for any given n(I feel the sum doesn't have any nice closed form).
3 replies
thewayofthe_dragon
Jun 16, 2024
P162008
an hour ago
IMO Shortlist 2013, Combinatorics #3
lyukhson   31
N an hour ago by Maximilian113
Source: IMO Shortlist 2013, Combinatorics #3
A crazy physicist discovered a new kind of particle wich he called an imon, after some of them mysteriously appeared in his lab. Some pairs of imons in the lab can be entangled, and each imon can participate in many entanglement relations. The physicist has found a way to perform the following two kinds of operations with these particles, one operation at a time.
(i) If some imon is entangled with an odd number of other imons in the lab, then the physicist can destroy it.
(ii) At any moment, he may double the whole family of imons in the lab by creating a copy $I'$ of each imon $I$. During this procedure, the two copies $I'$ and $J'$ become entangled if and only if the original imons $I$ and $J$ are entangled, and each copy $I'$ becomes entangled with its original imon $I$; no other entanglements occur or disappear at this moment.

Prove that the physicist may apply a sequence of such operations resulting in a family of imons, no two of which are entangled.
31 replies
lyukhson
Jul 9, 2014
Maximilian113
an hour ago
No more topics!
Vieta-jumping
Syler   3
N Apr 4, 2011 by ArefS
Let $ a,b,k $ be positive integers such that
$ k=\frac{a^2+b^2}{ab-1} $
Prove that $ k=5. $
3 replies
Syler
May 29, 2010
ArefS
Apr 4, 2011
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Syler
66 posts
#1 • 1 Y
Y by Adventure10
Let $ a,b,k $ be positive integers such that
$ k=\frac{a^2+b^2}{ab-1} $
Prove that $ k=5. $
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jgnr
1343 posts
#2 • 3 Y
Y by sunny2000, Adventure10, Mango247
Suppose there exist $(a,b,k)\in\mathbb{N}^3$ such that $k=\frac{a^2+b^2}{ab-1}$ and $k\ne5$. Let $S=\left\{(m,n)\in\mathbb{N}^2|\frac{m^2+n^2}{mn-1}=k\right\}$. Take $(m,n)\in S$ such that $m+n$ is minimum, suppose without loss of generality that $m\ge n$. If $m=n$ then $\frac{m^2+n^2}{mn-1}=\frac{2m^2}{m^2-1}=2+\frac2{m^2-1}$, so $m^2-1\in\{1,2\}$ which is impossible. If $m=n+1$ then $\frac{m^2+n^2}{mn-1}=\frac{2n^2+2n+1}{n^2+n-1}=2+\frac3{n^2+n-1}$, so $n^2+n-1\in\{1,3\}$ and $n=1$ which gives $k=\frac{2^2+1^2}{2\cdot1-1}=5$, a contradiction. Therefore $m\ge n+2$. Note that $\frac{t^2+n^2}{tn-1}=k$ is equivalent to $t^2-tkn+n^2+k=0$. One of its roots is $t_1=m$. The other root is $t_2=kn-t_1=\frac{n^2+k}{t_1}$ and hence is a positive integer, so $(t_2,n)\in S$. By our assumption of the minimality of $m+n$, we must have $t_2+n\ge m+n$. So $\frac{n^2+k}m\ge m$, $n^2+\frac{m^2+n^2}{mn-1}\ge m^2$, $mn^3+m^2\ge m^3n-m^2$, $2m\ge m^2n-n^3=n(m^2-n^2)\ge n(m^2-(m-2)^2)\ge4m-4$, thus $m\le2$ which is impossible since $n\le m-2$. Thus our assumption was wrong, therefore if $a,b,\frac{a^2+b^2}{ab-1}\in\mathbb{N}$ then $\frac{a^2+b^2}{ab-1}=5$.
Z K Y
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cfheolpiixn
53 posts
#3 • 2 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247
Here is another way to solve it.

Consider a pair of $ (a,b) $ satisfying the conditions.
Without loss of generality we may assume that there is a solution $ a>b>1 $.
(Since we know $ a=b $ has no solutions.)
Then we have $ a^2-kab+(b^2+k)=0 $.

So there is another root called $ a' $ that satisfies:
$ a+a'=kb -(1)$
$ aa'=b^2+k -(2)$
We know that $ a' $ is also an integer (by $ (1) $),
and $ a' $ is positive (by $ (2) $).

Hence $ (a',b) $ is also a pair of solution.
But we have $ a'-1=\frac{(b^2+k)-kb+1}{a-1}\leq \frac{b^2-3b+4}{b}\leq b-1 $

The last inequality holds because obviously $ k>2 $, and we assume that $ b>1 $.
We jump from $ (a,b) $ to $ (b,a') $.
Repeat these steps, and the loop will finally stop until one of them is $ 1 $.

Now take $ b=1 $, then we get $ a-1|a^2+1 $ which leads to $ a=2,3 $,
both of them concludes $ k=5 $.
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ArefS
306 posts
#4 • 3 Y
Y by Amir Hossein, Adventure10, Mango247
here is my solution to this problem:
WLOG assume that $b\ge a$
notice that the hypothesis implies:
$ab-1\mid a^2+b^2$
$\implies ab-1\mid a^3+ab^2$ and we have: $ab-1\mid ab^2-b$ so $ab-1\mid a^3+b$ and therefore $\frac{a^3+b}{ab-1}$ is a positive integer.
We use strong induction on $ab$.
we claim that there is a positive integer $c$ such that $\frac{a^2+c^2}{ac-1}=\frac{a^2+b^2}{ab-1}=k$ and $c<b$.
assume that for a real $c$ we have that: $\frac{a^2+c^2}{ac-1}=\frac{a^2+b^2}{ab-1}=k$
$\iff (b-c)(a^3+b+c-abc)=0$
$\iff a^3+b=c(ab-1)$
$\iff c=\frac{a^3+b}{ab-1}$
so $c\in \mathbb N$
we have to prove that $c<b$.
$\iff a^3<b(ab-2)$
we know that $b>a$ we only need to prove that $a^2<ab-2 \iff a(b-a)>2$
we consider 4 Cases:

$\bullet a=b$
Click to reveal hidden text

$\bullet a=b-1$
Click to reveal hidden text

$\bullet a=b-2$
Click to reveal hidden text

$\bullet b-a>2$
in the last case we obviously have $c<b$ so $ac<ab$ and $\frac{a^2+c^2}{ac-1}=\frac{a^2+b^2}{ab-1}=k$.
According to the induction hypothesis we have that $\frac{a^2+c^2}{ac-1}=5$ and so $\frac{a^2+b^2}{ab-1}=5$.
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