Difference between revisions of "2004 AMC 12A Problems/Problem 14"

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<math>9r^2=29+2d</math>
 
<math>9r^2=29+2d</math>
  
Plugging in the first equation into the second, our equation becomes <math>9r^2=29+18r-22\Longrightarrow9r^2-18r+7=0</math>. By the quadratic formula, <math>r</math> can either be <math>-\frac{1}{3}</math> or <math>\frac{7}{3}</math>.  If <math>r</math> is <math>-\frac{1}{3}</math>, the third term (of the geometric sequence) would be <math>1</math>, and if <math>r</math> is <math>\frac{7}{3}</math>, the third term would be <math>49</math>.  Clearly the minimum possible value for the third term of the geometric sequence is <math>\boxed{\mathrm{(A)}\ 1}</math>.
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Plugging in the first equation into the second, our equation becomes <math>9r^2=29+18r-22\Longrightarrow9r^2-18r-7=0</math>. By the quadratic formula, <math>r</math> can either be <math>-\frac{1}{3}</math> or <math>\frac{7}{3}</math>.  If <math>r</math> is <math>-\frac{1}{3}</math>, the third term (of the geometric sequence) would be <math>1</math>, and if <math>r</math> is <math>\frac{7}{3}</math>, the third term would be <math>49</math>.  Clearly the minimum possible value for the third term of the geometric sequence is <math>\boxed{\mathrm{(A)}\ 1}</math>.
 
 
==Solution 3==
 
 
 
Let the three numbers be, in increasing order, <math>z,y,9</math>
 
  
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== Solution 3 ==
 +
Let the three numbers be, in increasing order, <math>9,y,z</math>
  
 
Hence, we have that <math>9-y=y-z\implies 9+z=2y</math>.
 
Hence, we have that <math>9-y=y-z\implies 9+z=2y</math>.
 
  
 
Also, from the second part of information given, we get that
 
Also, from the second part of information given, we get that
 
  
 
<math>\frac{9}{y+2}=\frac{y+2}{z+20}\implies 9(z+20)=(y+2)^2\implies y=3(\sqrt{z+20})-2</math>
 
<math>\frac{9}{y+2}=\frac{y+2}{z+20}\implies 9(z+20)=(y+2)^2\implies y=3(\sqrt{z+20})-2</math>
  
 +
Plugging back in...
  
Plugging back in..
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<math>9+z=6(\sqrt{z+20})-4\implies (9+z)^2=36(z+20)</math>
 
 
<math>9+z=6(\sqrt{z+20})-2\implies (9+z)^2=36(z+20)</math>
 
 
 
  
 
Simplifying, we get that <math>z^2-10z-551=0</math>
 
Simplifying, we get that <math>z^2-10z-551=0</math>
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However, the problem asks for the minimum value of the third term in a geometric progression.
 
However, the problem asks for the minimum value of the third term in a geometric progression.
  
Hence, the answer is <math>-19+20=\boxed{1}\implies\boxed{\mathrm{(A)}</math>
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Hence, the answer is <math>-19+20=\boxed{1} \implies \boxed{A}</math>
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== Solution 4 ==
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Let the arithmetic sequence be <math>9,9+x,9+2x</math> and let the geometric sequence be <math>9,11+x,29+2x</math>. Now, we just try all the solutions. If the last term is <math>1</math>, then <math>x=-14</math>. This gives the geometric sequence <math>9,-3,1</math> which indeed works. The answer is <math>\boxed{1} \implies \boxed{A}</math>
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Solution by franzliszt
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== Solution 5 ==
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The terms of the arithmetic progression are 9, <math>9+d</math>, and <math>9+2d</math> for some real number <math>d</math>. The terms of the geometric progression are 9, <math>11+d</math>, and <math>29+2d</math>. Therefore<math>
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(11+d)^{2} = 9(29+2d) \quad\text{so}\quad d^{2}+4d-140 = 0.
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</math>Thus <math>d=10</math> or <math>d=-14</math>. The corresponding geometric progressions are <math>9, 21, 49</math> and <math>9, -3, 1,</math> so the smallest possible value for the third term of the geometric progression is <math>\boxed{1} \implies \boxed{A}</math>.
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=== Solution 6(Partially Brute Force) ===
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List out the first few terms arithmetic progressions and their corresponding geometric progressions. List both the positive and negative. Then you will find that the answer is <math>\boxed{A}</math>.
 +
 
 +
== Video Solution ==
 +
https://youtu.be/qy3ewAuOcSw
 +
 
 +
Education, the Study of Everything
 +
 
 +
== Video Solution by OmegaLearn==
 +
https://youtu.be/HISL2-N5NVg?t=20
 +
 
 +
~ pi_is_3.14
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==

Latest revision as of 02:35, 16 January 2023

The following problem is from both the 2004 AMC 12A #14 and 2004 AMC 10A #18, so both problems redirect to this page.

Problem

A sequence of three real numbers forms an arithmetic progression with a first term of $9$. If $2$ is added to the second term and $20$ is added to the third term, the three resulting numbers form a geometric progression. What is the smallest possible value for the third term in the geometric progression?

$\text {(A)}\ 1 \qquad \text {(B)}\ 4 \qquad \text {(C)}\ 36 \qquad \text {(D)}\ 49 \qquad \text {(E)}\ 81$

Solution 1

Let $d$ be the common difference. Then $9$, $9+d+2=11+d$, $9+2d+20=29+2d$ are the terms of the geometric progression. Since the middle term is the geometric mean of the other two terms, $(11+d)^2 = 9(2d+29)$ $\Longrightarrow d^2 + 4d - 140$ $= (d+14)(d-10) = 0$. The smallest possible value occurs when $d = -14$, and the third term is $2(-14) + 29 = 1\Rightarrow\boxed{\mathrm{(A)}\ 1}$.

Solution 2

Let $d$ be the common difference and $r$ be the common ratio. Then the arithmetic sequence is $9$, $9+d$, and $9+2d$. The geometric sequence (when expressed in terms of $d$) has the terms $9$, $11+d$, and $29+2d$. Thus, we get the following equations:

$9r=11+d\Rightarrow d=9r-11$

$9r^2=29+2d$

Plugging in the first equation into the second, our equation becomes $9r^2=29+18r-22\Longrightarrow9r^2-18r-7=0$. By the quadratic formula, $r$ can either be $-\frac{1}{3}$ or $\frac{7}{3}$. If $r$ is $-\frac{1}{3}$, the third term (of the geometric sequence) would be $1$, and if $r$ is $\frac{7}{3}$, the third term would be $49$. Clearly the minimum possible value for the third term of the geometric sequence is $\boxed{\mathrm{(A)}\ 1}$.

Solution 3

Let the three numbers be, in increasing order, $9,y,z$

Hence, we have that $9-y=y-z\implies 9+z=2y$.

Also, from the second part of information given, we get that

$\frac{9}{y+2}=\frac{y+2}{z+20}\implies 9(z+20)=(y+2)^2\implies y=3(\sqrt{z+20})-2$

Plugging back in...

$9+z=6(\sqrt{z+20})-4\implies (9+z)^2=36(z+20)$

Simplifying, we get that $z^2-10z-551=0$

Applying the quadratic formula, we get that $z=\frac{10\pm \sqrt{2304}}{2}\implies \frac{10\pm48}{2}$

Obviously, in order to minimize the value of $z$, we have to subtract. Hence, $z=-19$

However, the problem asks for the minimum value of the third term in a geometric progression.

Hence, the answer is $-19+20=\boxed{1} \implies \boxed{A}$

Solution 4

Let the arithmetic sequence be $9,9+x,9+2x$ and let the geometric sequence be $9,11+x,29+2x$. Now, we just try all the solutions. If the last term is $1$, then $x=-14$. This gives the geometric sequence $9,-3,1$ which indeed works. The answer is $\boxed{1} \implies \boxed{A}$

Solution by franzliszt

Solution 5

The terms of the arithmetic progression are 9, $9+d$, and $9+2d$ for some real number $d$. The terms of the geometric progression are 9, $11+d$, and $29+2d$. Therefore$(11+d)^{2} = 9(29+2d) \quad\text{so}\quad d^{2}+4d-140 = 0.$Thus $d=10$ or $d=-14$. The corresponding geometric progressions are $9, 21, 49$ and $9, -3, 1,$ so the smallest possible value for the third term of the geometric progression is $\boxed{1} \implies \boxed{A}$.

Solution 6(Partially Brute Force)

List out the first few terms arithmetic progressions and their corresponding geometric progressions. List both the positive and negative. Then you will find that the answer is $\boxed{A}$.

Video Solution

https://youtu.be/qy3ewAuOcSw

Education, the Study of Everything

Video Solution by OmegaLearn

https://youtu.be/HISL2-N5NVg?t=20

~ pi_is_3.14

See also

2004 AMC 12A (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 13
Followed by
Problem 15
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
All AMC 12 Problems and Solutions
2004 AMC 10A (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 17
Followed by
Problem 19
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
All AMC 10 Problems and Solutions