Difference between revisions of "1995 IMO Problems/Problem 2"
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− | Note that <math>abc = 1 \implies a = \frac{1}{bc}</math>. The cyclic sum becomes <math>\sum_{cyc}\frac{(bc)^3}{b + c}</math>. Note that by AM-GM, the cyclic sum is greater than or equal to <math>3\left(\frac{1}{(a+b)(b+c)(a+c)}\right)^{\frac13}</math>. We now see that we have the three so we must be on the right path. We now only need to show that <math>\frac32 \geq 3\left(\frac{1}{(a+b)(b+c)(a+c)}\right)^\frac13</math>. Notice that by AM-GM, <math>a + b \geq 2\sqrt{ab}</math>, <math>b + c \geq 2\sqrt{bc}</math>, and <math>a + c \geq 2\sqrt{ac}</math>. Thus, we see that <math>(a+b)(b+c)(a+c) \geq 8</math>, concluding that <math>\sum_{cyc} \frac{(bc)^3}{b+c} \geq \frac32 \geq 3\left(\frac{1}{(a+b)(b+c)(a+c)}\right)^{\frac13}</math> | + | Note that <math>abc = 1 \implies a = \frac{1}{bc}</math>. The cyclic sum becomes <math>\sum_{cyc}\frac{(bc)^3}{b + c}</math>. Note that by AM-GM, the cyclic sum is greater than or equal to <math>3\left(\frac{1}{(a+b)(b+c)(a+c)}\right)^{\frac13}</math>. We now see that we have the three so we must be on the right path. We now only need to show that <math>\frac32 \geq 3\left(\frac{1}{(a+b)(b+c)(a+c)}\right)^\frac13</math>. Notice that by AM-GM, <math>a + b \geq 2\sqrt{ab}</math>, <math>b + c \geq 2\sqrt{bc}</math>, and <math>a + c \geq 2\sqrt{ac}</math>. Thus, we see that <math>(a+b)(b+c)(a+c) \geq 8</math>, concluding that <math>\sum_{cyc} \frac{(bc)^3}{b+c} \geq \frac32 \geq 3\left(\frac{1}{(a+b)(b+c)(a+c)}\right)^{\frac13}</math>. |
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=== Solution 7 from Brilliant Wiki (Muirheads) ==== | === Solution 7 from Brilliant Wiki (Muirheads) ==== |
Revision as of 05:32, 1 June 2024
Contents
[hide]Problem
(Nazar Agakhanov, Russia)
Let be positive real numbers such that
. Prove that
Solution
Solution 1
We make the substitution ,
,
. Then
Since
and
are similarly sorted sequences, it follows from the Rearrangement Inequality that
By the Power Mean Inequality,
Symmetric application of this argument yields
Finally, AM-GM gives us
as desired.
Solution 2
We make the same substitution as in the first solution. We note that in general,
It follows that
and
are similarly sorted sequences. Then by Chebyshev's Inequality,
By AM-GM,
, and by Nesbitt's Inequality,
The desired conclusion follows.
Solution 3
Without clever substitutions:
By Cauchy-Schwarz, Dividing by
gives
by AM-GM.
Solution 3b
Without clever notation:
By Cauchy-Schwarz,
Dividing by and noting that
by AM-GM gives
as desired.
Solution 4
After the setting and as
so
concluding
By Titu Lemma,
Now by AM-GM we know that
and
which concludes to
Therefore we get
Hence our claim is proved ~~ Aritra12
Solution 5
Proceed as in Solution 1, to arrive at the equivalent inequality
But we know that
by AM-GM. Furthermore,
by Cauchy-Schwarz, and so dividing by
gives
as desired.
Solution 6
Without clever substitutions, and only AM-GM!
Note that . The cyclic sum becomes
. Note that by AM-GM, the cyclic sum is greater than or equal to
. We now see that we have the three so we must be on the right path. We now only need to show that
. Notice that by AM-GM,
,
, and
. Thus, we see that
, concluding that
.
Solution 7 from Brilliant Wiki (Muirheads) =
https://brilliant.org/wiki/muirhead-inequality/
Solution 8 (fast Titu's Lemma no substitutions)
Rewrite as
.
Now applying Titu's lemma yields .
Now applying the AM-GM inequality on . The result now follows.
Note: , because
. (Why? Because
, and hence
).
~th1nq3r
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Alternate solutions are always welcome. If you have a different, elegant solution to this problem, please add it to this page.