1969 Canadian MO Problems/Problem 6

Revision as of 09:02, 3 December 2015 by Rafayaashary1 (talk | contribs) (Solution 2)

Problem

Find the sum of $1\cdot 1!+2\cdot 2!+3\cdot 3!+\cdots+(n-1)(n-1)!+n\cdot n!$, where $n!=n(n-1)(n-2)\cdots2\cdot1$.

Solution 1

Note that for any positive integer $n,$ $n\cdot n!+(n-1)\cdot(n-1)!=(n^2+n-1)(n-1)!=(n+1)!-(n-1)!.$ Hence, pairing terms in the series will telescope most of the terms.

If $n$ is odd, $(n+1)!-(n-1)!+(n-1)!-(n-3)!\cdots -2!+2!-0!.$

If $n$ is even, $(n+1)!-(n-1)!+(n-1)!-(n-3)!\cdots -3!+3!-1!.$ In both cases, the expression telescopes into $(n+1)!-1.$

Solution 2

We need to evaluate: \[1\cdot 1!+2\cdot 2!+\cdots+(n-1)(n-1)!+n\cdot n!\] We replace $k\cdot k!$ with $((k+1)-1)\cdot k!$ \[(2-1)\cdot 1!+(3-1)\cdot 2!+\cdots+((n)-1)(n-1)!+((n+1)-1)\cdot n!\] Distribution yields \[(2\cdot 1!-1\cdot1!+3\cdot2!-1\cdot2!+\cdots+n(n-1)!-1(n-1)!+(n+1)n!-1\cdot n!\] Simplifying, \[2!-1!+3!-2!+\cdots+n!-(n-1)!+(n+1)!-n!\] Which telescopes to \[(n+1)!-1!=(n+1)!-1\] So $(n+1)!-1$ is the solution.

1969 Canadian MO (Problems)
Preceded by
Problem 5
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Followed by
Problem 7