2016 AIME I Problems/Problem 10
Contents
Problem
A strictly increasing sequence of positive integers ,
,
,
has the property that for every positive integer
, the subsequence
,
,
is geometric and the subsequence
,
,
is arithmetic. Suppose that
. Find
.
Solution 1
We first create a similar sequence where and
. Continuing the sequence,
Here we can see a pattern; every second term (starting from the first) is a square, and every second term (starting from the third) is the end of a geometric sequence. This can be proven by induction. Similarly, would also need to be the end of a geometric sequence (divisible by a square). We see that
is
, so the squares that would fit in
are
,
,
,
,
, and
. By simple inspection
is the only plausible square, since the other squares in the sequence don't have enough elements before them to go all the way back to
while still staying as positive integers.
, so
.
~IYN~
Solution 2
Setting and
, the sequence becomes:
and so forth, with
. Then,
. Keep in mind,
need not be an integer, only
etc. does.
, so only the squares
and
are plausible for
. But when that is anything other than
,
is not an integer. Therefore,
.
Thanks for reading, Rowechen Zhong.
Solution 3
This is not a hard bash. You can try the ratios ,
, and
Working backwards from
we get
Solution 4(Very Risky and Very Stupid)
The thirteenth term of the sequence is , which makes that fourteenth term of the sequence
and the
term
. We note that
is an integer so that means
is an integer. Thus, we assume the smallest value of
, which is
. We bash all the way back to the first term and get our answer of
.
-Pleaseletmewin
See also
2016 AIME I (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 9 |
Followed by Problem 11 | |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 | ||
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