Difference between revisions of "2000 AIME I Problems/Problem 10"

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Now, substituting for <math>x_{50}</math>, we get <math>2x_{50}=\frac{2525}{49}-50=\frac{75}{49} \Longrightarrow x_{50}=\frac{75}{98}</math>, and the answer is <math>75+98=\boxed{173}</math>.
 
Now, substituting for <math>x_{50}</math>, we get <math>2x_{50}=\frac{2525}{49}-50=\frac{75}{49} \Longrightarrow x_{50}=\frac{75}{98}</math>, and the answer is <math>75+98=\boxed{173}</math>.
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== Solution 2 ==
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Consider <math>x_k</math> and <math>x_{k+1}</math>. Let <math>S</math> be the sum of the rest 98 terms. Then <math>x_k+k=S+x_{k+1}</math> and <math>x_{k+1}+(k+1)=S+x_k.</math> Eliminating <math>S</math> we have <math>x_{k+1}-x_k=-\dfrac{1}{2}.</math> So the sequence is arithmetic with common difference <math>-\dfrac{1}{2}.</math>
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In terms of <math>x_{50},</math> the sequence is <math>x_{50}+\dfrac{49}{2}, x_{50}+\dfrac{48}{2},\cdots,x_{50}+\dfrac{1}{2}, x_{50}, x_{50}-\dfrac{1}{2}, \cdots, x_{50}-\dfrac{49}{2}, x_{50}-\dfrac{50}{2}.</math> Therefore <math>x_{50}+50=99x_{50}-\dfrac{50}{2}</math>. We are done by solving for <math>x_{50}</math>.
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-JZ
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==Video solution==
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TdvxgrSZTQw
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==

Revision as of 15:42, 25 July 2020

Problem

A sequence of numbers $x_{1},x_{2},x_{3},\ldots,x_{100}$ has the property that, for every integer $k$ between $1$ and $100,$ inclusive, the number $x_{k}$ is $k$ less than the sum of the other $99$ numbers. Given that $x_{50} = m/n,$ where $m$ and $n$ are relatively prime positive integers, find $m + n$.

Solution

Let the sum of all of the terms in the sequence be $\mathbb{S}$. Then for each integer $k$, $x_k = \mathbb{S}-x_k-k \Longrightarrow \mathbb{S} - 2x_k = k$. Summing this up for all $k$ from $1, 2, \ldots, 100$,

\begin{align*}100\mathbb{S}-2(x_1 + x_2 + \cdots + x_{100}) &= 1 + 2 + \cdots + 100\\ 100\mathbb{S} - 2\mathbb{S} &= \frac{100 \cdot 101}{2} = 5050\\ \mathbb{S}&=\frac{2525}{49}\end{align*}

Now, substituting for $x_{50}$, we get $2x_{50}=\frac{2525}{49}-50=\frac{75}{49} \Longrightarrow x_{50}=\frac{75}{98}$, and the answer is $75+98=\boxed{173}$.

Solution 2

Consider $x_k$ and $x_{k+1}$. Let $S$ be the sum of the rest 98 terms. Then $x_k+k=S+x_{k+1}$ and $x_{k+1}+(k+1)=S+x_k.$ Eliminating $S$ we have $x_{k+1}-x_k=-\dfrac{1}{2}.$ So the sequence is arithmetic with common difference $-\dfrac{1}{2}.$

In terms of $x_{50},$ the sequence is $x_{50}+\dfrac{49}{2}, x_{50}+\dfrac{48}{2},\cdots,x_{50}+\dfrac{1}{2}, x_{50}, x_{50}-\dfrac{1}{2}, \cdots, x_{50}-\dfrac{49}{2}, x_{50}-\dfrac{50}{2}.$ Therefore $x_{50}+50=99x_{50}-\dfrac{50}{2}$. We are done by solving for $x_{50}$.

-JZ

Video solution

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TdvxgrSZTQw

See also

2000 AIME I (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 9
Followed by
Problem 11
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All AIME Problems and Solutions

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