2024 AMC 12A Problems/Problem 15
Contents
Problem
The roots of are and What is the value of
Solution 1
You can factor as .
For any polynomial , you can create a new polynomial , which will have roots that instead have the value subtracted.
Substituting and into for the first polynomial, gives you and as for both equations. Multiplying and together gives you .
-ev2028
~Latex by eevee9406
Solution 2
Let . Then .
We find that and , so .
Select D
~eevee9406
Solution 3
First, denote that Then we expand the expression ~lptoggled
Solution 4 (Reduction of power)
The motivation for this solution is the observation that is easy to compute for any constant c, since (*), where is the polynomial given in the problem. The idea is to transform the expression involving into one involving .
Since is a root of , which gives us that . Then Since and are also roots of , the same analysis holds, so
\begin{align*} (p^2 + 4)(q^2 + 4)(r^2 + 4)&= \left(5\cdot \frac{p+1}{p+2}\right)\left(5\cdot \frac{q+1}{q+2}\right)\left(5\cdot \frac{r+1}{r+2}\right)\\ &= 125 \frac{(p+1)(q+1)(r+1)}{(p+2)(q+2)(r+2)}\\ &= 125 \frac{-f(-1)}{-f(-2)} \\ &= 125\cdot 1\\ &=\boxed{\textbf{(D) }125}. \end{align*}
(*) This is because since for all .
~tsun26 ~KSH31415 (final step and clarification)
Solution 5 (Cheesing it out)
Expanding the expression gives us
Notice that everything other than is a multiple of . Solving for using vieta's formulas, we get . Since is , the answer should be as well. The only answer that is is .
~callyaops
Solution 6
Suppose
then , which can be substituted into
according to Vieta's theorem,
~JiYang
See also
2024 AMC 12A (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | |
Preceded by Problem 14 |
Followed by Problem 16 |
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