2024 USAJMO Problems/Problem 5

Revision as of 13:04, 24 March 2024 by Virjoy2001 (talk | contribs) (Solution 1)

Problem

Find all functions $f:\mathbb{R}\rightarrow\mathbb{R}$ that satisfy \[f(x^2-y)+2yf(x)=f(f(x))+f(y)\] for all $x,y\in\mathbb{R}$.

Solution 1

I will denote the original equation $f(x^2-y)+2yf(x)=f(f(x))+f(y)$ as OE.

I claim that the only solutions are $f(x) = -x^2, f(x) = 0,$ and $f(x) = x^2.$

Lemma 1: $f(0) = 0.$

Proof of Lemma 1:

We prove this by contradiction. Assume $f(0) = k \neq 0.$

By letting $x=y=0$ in the OE, we have \[f(0) = f^2(0) + f(0) \Longrightarrow f^2(0) = 0 \Longrightarrow f(k) = 0.\]

If we let $x = 0$ and $y = k^2$ in the OE, we have \[f(-k^2) + 2k^2f(0) = f^2(0) + f(k^2) \Longrightarrow f(-k^2) + 2k^3 = f(k^2)\] and if we let $x = k$ and $y = k^2$ in the OE, we get

\[f(0) + 2k^2f(k) = f^2(k) + f(k^2) \Longrightarrow k = k + f(k^2) \Longrightarrow f(k^2) = 0 \Longrightarrow f(-k^2) = 2k^3.\]

However, upon substituting $x = k$ and $y = -k^2$ in the OE, this implies

\[f(0) -2k^2f(k) = f^2(k) + f(-k^2) \Longrightarrow k = k + 2k^3 \Longrightarrow 2k^3 = 0.\]

This means $k = 0,$ but we assumed $k \neq 0,$ contradiction, which proves the Lemma.

Substitute $y = 0$ in the OE to obtain \[f(x^2) = f^2(x) + f(0) = f^2(x)\] and let $y = x^2$ in the OE to get \[f(0) + 2x^2 f(x) = f^2(x) + f(x^2) = 2f(x^2) = 2x^2 f(x) \Longrightarrow \dfrac{f(x)}{x^2} = \dfrac{f(x^2)}{x^4} \Longrightarrow f(x) \propto x^2.\]

Thus we can write $f(x) = kx^2$ for some $k.$ By $f(x^2) = f^2(x),$ we have \[kx^4 = k^3x^4,\] so $k = -1, 0, 1,$ yielding the solutions \[f(x) = -x^2, f(x) = 0, f(x) = x^2.  \blacksquare\]

- spectraldragon8

See Also

2024 USAJMO (ProblemsResources)
Preceded by
Problem 4
Followed by
Problem 6
1 2 3 4 5 6
All USAJMO Problems and Solutions

The problems on this page are copyrighted by the Mathematical Association of America's American Mathematics Competitions. AMC logo.png