Difference between revisions of "1991 AIME Problems/Problem 1"

(Solution 4)
(Solution 4)
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~ Nafer
 
~ Nafer
 
=== Solution 4 ===
 
=== Solution 4 ===
From the first equation, we know x+y=71-xy<math>. We factor the second equation as xy(71-xy)=880</math>. Let a=xy$ and rearranging we get a^2-71a+880=(a-16)(a-55)=0. We have two cases: (1) x+y=16 and xy=55 OR (2) x+y=55 and xy=16. We find the former is true for (x,y) = (5,11). x^2+y^2=121+25=146. (sorry, but I don't know how to use Latex).
+
From the first equation, we know x+y=71-xy<math>. We factor the second equation as xy(71-xy)=880</math>. Let a=xy$ and rearranging we get a^2-71a+880=(a-16)(a-55)=0. We have two cases: (1) x+y=16 and xy=55 OR (2) x+y=55 and xy=16. We find the former is true for (x,y) = (5,11). x^2+y^2=121+25=146. (sorry, I don't know how to use Latex).
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==

Revision as of 12:32, 30 December 2019

Problem

Find $x^2+y^2_{}$ if $x_{}^{}$ and $y_{}^{}$ are positive integers such that

$xy_{}^{}+x+y = 71$
$x^2y+xy^2 = 880^{}_{}.$

Solution

Solution 1

Define $a = x + y$ and $b = xy$. Then $a + b = 71$ and $ab = 880$. Solving these two equations yields a quadratic: $a^2 - 71a + 880 = 0$, which factors to $(a - 16)(a - 55) = 0$. Either $a = 16$ and $b = 55$ or $a = 55$ and $b = 16$. For the first case, it is easy to see that $(x,y)$ can be $(5,11)$ (or vice versa). In the second case, since all factors of $16$ must be $\le 16$, no two factors of $16$ can sum greater than $32$, and so there are no integral solutions for $(x,y)$. The solution is $5^2 + 11^2 = \boxed{146}$.

Solution 2

Since $xy + x + y + 1 = 72$, this can be factored to $(x + 1)(y + 1) = 72$. As $x$ and $y$ are integers, the possible sets for $(x,y)$ (ignoring cases where $x > y$ since it is symmetrical) are $(1, 35),\ (2, 23),\ (3, 17),\ (5, 11),\ (7,8)$. The second equation factors to $(x + y)xy = 880 = 2^4 \cdot 5 \cdot 11$. The only set with a factor of $11$ is $(5,11)$, and checking shows that it is our solution.


Solution 3

Let $a=x+y$, $b=xy$ then we get the equations \begin{align*} a+b&=71\\ ab&=880 \end{align*} After finding the prime factorization of $880=2^4\cdot5\cdot11$, it's easy to obtain the solution $(a,b)=(16,55)$. Thus \[x^2+y^2=(x+y)^2-2xy=a^2-2b=16^2-2\cdot55=\boxed{146}\] Note that if $(a,b)=(55,16)$, the answer would exceed $999$ which is invalid for an AIME answer. ~ Nafer

Solution 4

From the first equation, we know x+y=71-xy$. We factor the second equation as xy(71-xy)=880$. Let a=xy$ and rearranging we get a^2-71a+880=(a-16)(a-55)=0. We have two cases: (1) x+y=16 and xy=55 OR (2) x+y=55 and xy=16. We find the former is true for (x,y) = (5,11). x^2+y^2=121+25=146. (sorry, I don't know how to use Latex).

See also

1991 AIME (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
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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