1991 AIME Problems/Problem 1
Problem
Find if
and
are positive integers such that
![$xy_{}^{}+x+y = 71$](http://latex.artofproblemsolving.com/d/c/5/dc565ff6101912a3697a0d86a8599417d28f166f.png)
![$x^2y+xy^2 = 880^{}_{}.$](http://latex.artofproblemsolving.com/e/2/8/e28b7a0ff087588f697f1eb0f77b6838d6a1dfe2.png)
Contents
Solution
Solution 1
Define and
. Then
and
. Solving these two equations yields a quadratic:
, which factors to
. Either
and
or
and
. For the first case, it is easy to see that
can be
(or vice versa). In the second case, since all factors of
must be
, no two factors of
can sum greater than
, and so there are no integral solutions for
. The solution is
.
Solution 2
Since , this can be factored to
. As
and
are integers, the possible sets for
(ignoring cases where
since it is symmetrical) are
. The second equation factors to
. The only set with a factor of
is
, and checking shows that it is correct.
Solution 3
Let ,
then we get the equations
After finding the prime factorization of
, it's easy to obtain the solution
. Thus
Note that if
, the answer would exceed
which is invalid for an AIME answer.
~ Nafer
Solution 4
From the first equation, we know . We factor the second equation as
. Let
and rearranging we get
. We have two cases: (1)
and
OR (2)
and
. We find the former is true for
.
.
Solution 5
First, notice that you can factor as
. From this, we notice that
and
is a common occurrence, so that lends itself to a simple solution by substitution. Let
and
. From this substitution, we get the following system:
Solving that system gives us the following two pairs
:
and
. The second one is obviously too big as
is clearly out of bounds for an AIME problem (More on that later). Therefore, we proceed with substituting back the pair
. This means that
and
Then, instead of solving the system, we can do a clever manipulation by squaring
. Doing so, we get:
We see that in this form, we can substitute everything in except for
, which is the desired answer. Substituting, we get:
so
. (If we were to go with the pair
, then the
would be absurdly out of bounds)
See also
1991 AIME (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
Preceded by First question |
Followed by Problem 2 | |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 | ||
All AIME Problems and Solutions |
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