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AIME 2013 II · 第 12 题

AIME 2013 II — Problem 12

专题
Contest Math
难度
L4
来源
AIME

题目详情

Problem 12

Let SS be the set of all polynomials of the form z3+az2+bz+cz^3 + az^2 + bz + c, where aa, bb, and cc are integers. Find the number of polynomials in SS such that each of its roots zz satisfies either z=20|z| = 20 or z=13|z| = 13.

解析

Solution 1

Every cubic with real coefficients has to have either three real roots or one real and two nonreal roots which are conjugates. This follows from Vieta's formulas.

  • Case 1: f(z)=(zr)(zω)(zω)f(z)=(z-r)(z-\omega)(z-\omega^*), where rRr\in \mathbb{R}, ω\omega is nonreal, and ω\omega^* is the complex conjugate of omega (note that we may assume that (ω)>0\Im(\omega)>0).

The real root rr must be one of 20-20, 2020, 13-13, or 1313. By Viète's formulas, a=(r+ω+ω)a=-(r+\omega+\omega^*), b=ω2+r(ω+ω)b=|\omega|^2+r(\omega+\omega^*), and c=rω2c=-r|\omega|^2. But ω+ω=2(ω)\omega+\omega^*=2\Re{(\omega)} (i.e., adding the conjugates cancels the imaginary part). Therefore, to make aa an integer, 2(ω)2\Re{(\omega)} must be an integer. Conversely, if ω+ω=2(ω)\omega+\omega^*=2\Re{(\omega)} is an integer, then a,b,a,b, and cc are clearly integers. Therefore 2(ω)Z2\Re{(\omega)}\in \mathbb{Z} is equivalent to the desired property. Let ω=α+iβ\omega=\alpha+i\beta.

  • Subcase 1.1: ω=20|\omega|=20.

In this case, ω\omega lies on a circle of radius 2020 in the complex plane. As ω\omega is nonreal, we see that β0\beta\ne 0. Hence 20<(ω)<20-20<\Re{(\omega)}< 20, or rather 40<2(ω)<40-40<2\Re{(\omega)}< 40. We count 7979 integers in this interval, each of which corresponds to a unique complex number on the circle of radius 2020 with positive imaginary part.

  • Subcase 1.2: ω=13|\omega|=13.

In this case, ω\omega lies on a circle of radius 1313 in the complex plane. As ω\omega is nonreal, we see that β0\beta\ne 0. Hence 13<(ω)<13-13<\Re{(\omega)}< 13, or rather 26<2(ω)<26-26<2\Re{(\omega)}< 26. We count 5151 integers in this interval, each of which corresponds to a unique complex number on the circle of radius 1313 with positive imaginary part.

Therefore, there are 79+51=13079+51=130 choices for ω\omega. We also have 44 choices for rr, hence there are 4130=5204\cdot 130=520 total polynomials in this case.

  • Case 2: f(z)=(zr1)(zr2)(zr3)f(z)=(z-r_1)(z-r_2)(z-r_3), where r1,r2,r3r_1,r_2,r_3 are all real.

In this case, there are four possible real roots, namely ±13,±20\pm 13, \pm20. Let pp be the number of times that 1313 appears among r1,r2,r3r_1,r_2,r_3, and define q,r,sq,r,s similarly for 13,20-13,20, and 20-20, respectively. Then p+q+r+s=3p+q+r+s=3 because there are three roots. We wish to find the number of ways to choose nonnegative integers p,q,r,sp,q,r,s that satisfy that equation. By balls and urns, these can be chosen in (63)=20\binom{6}{3}=20 ways.

Therefore, there are a total of 520+20=540520+20=\boxed{540} polynomials with the desired property.

Solution 2 (Systematics)

This combinatorics problem involves counting, and casework is most appropriate. There are two cases: either all three roots are real, or one is real and there are two imaginary roots.

Case 1: Three roots are of the set 13,13,20,20{13, -13, 20, -20}. By stars and bars, there is (63)=20\binom{6}{3}=20 ways (3 bars between all four possibilities, and then 3 stars that represent the roots themselves).

Case 2: One real root: one of 13,13,20,2013, -13, 20, -20. Then two imaginary roots left; it is well known that because coefficients of the polynomial are integral (and thus not imaginary), these roots are conjugates. Therefore, either both roots have a norm (also called magnitude) of 2020 or 1313. Call the root a+bia+bi, where aa is not the magnitude of the root; otherwise, it would be case 1. We need integral coefficients: expansion of (x(a+bi))(x(abi))=2ax+x2+(a2+b2)(x-(a+bi))(x-(a-bi))=-2ax+x^2+(a^2+b^2) tells us that we just need 2a2a to be integral, because a2+b2a^2+b^2 IS the norm of the root! (Note that it is not necessary to multiply by the real root. That won't affect whether or not a coefficient is imaginary.) Therefore, when the norm is 2020, the aa term can range from 19.5,19,....,0,0.5,...,19.5-19.5, -19, ...., 0, 0.5, ..., 19.5 or 7979 solutions. When the norm is 1313, the aa term has 5151 possibilities from 12.5,12,...,12.5-12.5, -12, ..., 12.5. In total that's 130 total ways to choose the imaginary root. Now, multiply by the ways to choose the real root, 44, and you get 520520 for this case.

And 520+20=540520+20=540 and we are done.

Solution 3 (Comments)

If the polynomial has one real root and two complex roots, then it can be factored as (zr)(z2+pz+q),(z-r)(z^2+pz+q), where rr is real with r=13,20|r|=13,20 and p,qp,q are integers with p2<4q.p^2 <4q. The roots z1z_1 and z2z_2 are conjugates. We have z12=z22=z1z2=q.|z_1|^2=|z_2|^2=z_1z_2=q. So qq is either 20220^2 or 13213^2. The only requirement for pp is p<4q2=2q.p<\sqrt{4q^2}=2q. All such quadratic equations are listed as follows:

z2+pz+202,z^2+pz+20^2, where p=0,±1,±2,,±39,p=0,\pm1,\pm2,\cdots,\pm 39,

z2+pz+132,z^2+pz+13^2, where p=0,±1,±2,,±25p=0,\pm1,\pm2,\cdots,\pm 25.

Total of 130 equations, multiplied by 4 (the number of cases for real rr, we have 520 equations, as indicated in the solution.

-JZ

Solution 4

There are two cases: either all the roots are real, or one is real and two are imaginary.

Case 1: All roots are real. Then each of the roots is a member of the set {20,20,13,13}\{-20, 20, -13, 13\}. It splits into three sub-cases: either no two are the same, exactly two are the same, or all three are the same.

Sub-case 1.1: No two are the same. This is obviously (43)=4\dbinom{4}{3}=4.

Sub-case 1.2: Exactly two are the same. There are four ways to choose the root that will repeat twice, and three ways to choose the remaining root. For this sub-case, 43=124\cdot 3=12.

Sub-case 1.3: All three are the same. This is obviously 44.

Thus for case one, we have 4+12+4=204+12+4=20 polynomials in SS. We now have case two, which we state below.

Case 2: Two roots are imaginary and one is real. Let these roots be pqip-qi, p+qip+qi, and rr. Then by Vieta's formulas

  • (2p+r)=a-(2p+r)=a;
  • p2+q2+2pr=bp^{2}+q^{2}+2pr=b;
  • (p2+q2)r=c-\left(p^{2}+q^{2}\right)r=c.

Since aa, bb, cc, and rr are integers, we have that p=12kp=\frac{1}{2}k for some integer kk. Case two splits into two sub-cases now:

Sub-case 2.1: pqi=p+qi=13|p-qi|=|p+qi|=13. Obviously, p<13|p|<13. The 5151 cases in which pp is either 0,±12,±22,±32,,±2520,\pm\frac{1}{2},\pm\frac{2}{2},\pm\frac{3}{2},\ldots,\pm\frac{25}{2} are acceptable. Each can pair with one value of qq and four values of rr, adding 514=20451\cdot 4=204 polynomials to SS.

Sub-case 2.2: pqi=p+qi=20|p-qi|=|p+qi|=20. Obviously, p<20|p|<20. Here, the 7979 cases in which pp is either 0,±12,±22,±32,,±3920,\pm\frac{1}{2},\pm\frac{2}{2},\pm\frac{3}{2},\ldots,\pm\frac{39}{2} are acceptable. Again, each can pair with a single value of qq as well as four values of rr, adding 794=31679\cdot 4=316 polynomials to SS.

Thus for case two, 204+316=520204+316=520 polynomials are part of SS.

All in all, 20+204+316=54020+204+316=\boxed{540} polynomials can call SS home.

Video Solution

https://youtu.be/-U65hhr1Smw?si=2JfRYL032MhUe276

~MathProblemSolvingSkills.com