2015 AMC 12A Problems/Problem 18
Contents
[hide]Problem
Given that the polynomial has only positive integer roots, find the average of all distinct possibilities for
.
Solution 1
The problem asks us to find the sum of every integer value of such that the roots of
are both integers.
The quadratic formula gives the roots of the quadratic equation:
As long as the numerator is an even integer, the roots are both integers. But first of all, the radical term in the numerator needs to be an integer; that is, the discriminant equals
, for some nonnegative integer
.
From this last equation, we are given a hint of the Pythagorean theorem. Thus, must be a Pythagorean triple unless
.
In the case , the equation simplifies to
. From this equation, we have
. For both
and
,
yields two integers, so these values satisfy the constraints from the original problem statement. (Note: the two zero roots count as "two integers.")
If is a positive integer, then only one Pythagorean triple could match the triple
because the only Pythagorean triple with a
as one of the values is the classic
triple. Here,
and
. Hence,
. Again,
yields two integers for both
and
, so these two values also satisfy the original constraints.
There are a total of four possible values for :
and
. Hence, the sum of all of the possible values of
is
.
Solution 2
Let and
be the roots of
By Vieta's Formulas, and
Substituting gets us
Using Simon's Favorite Factoring Trick:
This means that the values for are
giving us
values of
and
. Adding these up gets
.
Solution 3
The quadratic formula gives . For
to be an integer, it is necessary (and sufficient!) that
to be a perfect square. So we have
; this is a quadratic in itself and the quadratic formula gives
We want to be a perfect square. From smartly trying small values of
, we find
as solutions, which correspond to
. These are the only ones; if we want to make sure then we must hand check up to
. Indeed, for
we have that the differences between consecutive squares are greater than
so we can't have
be a perfect square. So summing our values for
we find 16 (C) as the answer.
See Also
2015 AMC 12A (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | |
Preceded by Problem 17 |
Followed by Problem 19 |
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