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AIME 2014 II · 第 10 题

AIME 2014 II — Problem 10

专题
Contest Math
难度
L4
来源
AIME

题目详情

Problem

Let zz be a complex number with z=2014|z|=2014. Let PP be the polygon in the complex plane whose vertices are zz and every ww such that 1z+w=1z+1w\frac{1}{z+w}=\frac{1}{z}+\frac{1}{w}. Then the area enclosed by PP can be written in the form n3n\sqrt{3}, where nn is an integer. Find the remainder when nn is divided by 10001000.

解析

Solution 1 (long but non-bashy)

Note that the given equality reduces to

1w+z=w+zwz\frac{1}{w+z} = \frac{w+z}{wz} wz=(w+z)2wz = {(w+z)}^2 w2+wz+z2=0w^2 + wz + z^2 = 0 w3z3wz=0\frac{w^3 - z^3}{w-z} = 0 w3=z3,wzw^3 = z^3, w \neq z Now, let w=rweiθww = r_w e^{i \theta_w} and likewise for zz. Consider circle OO with the origin as the center and radius 2014 on the complex plane. It is clear that zz must be one of the points on this circle, as z=2014|z| = 2014.

By DeMoivre's Theorem, the complex modulus of ww is cubed when ww is cubed. Thus ww must lie on OO, since its the cube of its modulus, and thus its modulus, must be equal to zz's modulus.

Again, by DeMoivre's Theorem, θw\theta_w is tripled when ww is cubed and likewise for zz. For ww, zz, and the origin to lie on the same line, 3θw3 \theta_w must be some multiple of 360 degrees apart from 3θz3 \theta_z , so θw\theta_w must differ from θz\theta_z by some multiple of 120 degrees.

Now, without loss of generality, assume that zz is on the real axis. (The circle can be rotated to put zz in any other location.) Then there are precisely two possible distinct locations for ww; one is obtained by going 120 degrees clockwise from zz about the circle and the other by moving the same amount counter-clockwise. Moving along the circle with any other multiple of 120 degrees in any direction will result in these three points.

Let the two possible locations for ww be W1W_1 and W2W_2 and the location of zz be point ZZ. Note that by symmetry, W1W2ZW_1W_2Z is equilateral, say, with side length xx. We know that the circumradius of this equilateral triangle is 20142014, so using the formula abc4R=[ABC]\frac{abc}{4R} = [ABC] and that the area of an equilateral triangle with side length ss is s234\frac{s^2\sqrt{3}}{4}, so we have

x34R=x234\frac{x^3}{4R} = \frac{x^2\sqrt{3}}{4} x=R3x = R \sqrt{3} x234=3R234\frac{x^2\sqrt{3}}{4} = \frac{3R^2 \sqrt{3}}{4} Since we're concerned with the non-radical part of this expression and R=2014R = 2014,

3R24310072372147(mod1000)\frac{3R^2}{4} \equiv 3 \cdot 1007^2 \equiv 3 \cdot 7^2 \equiv \boxed{147} \pmod{1000} and we are done. \blacksquare

Solution 2 (short)

Assume z=2014z = 2014. Then

12014+w=12014+1w\frac{1}{2014 + w} = \frac{1}{2014} + \frac{1}{w} 2014w=w(2014+w)+2014(2014+w)2014w = w(2014 + w) + 2014(2014 + w) 2014w=2014w+w2+20142+2014w2014w = 2014w + w^2 + 2014^2 + 2014w 0=w2+2014w+201420 = w^2 + 2014w + 2014^2 w=2014±201424(20142)2=1007±10073iw = \frac{-2014 \pm \sqrt{2014^2 - 4(2014^2)}}{2} = -1007 \pm 1007\sqrt{3}i Thus PP is an isosceles triangle with area 12(2014(1007))(210073)=302110073\frac{1}{2}(2014 - (-1007))(2\cdot 1007\sqrt{3}) = 3021\cdot 1007\sqrt{3} and n721147(mod1000).n \equiv 7\cdot 21\equiv \boxed{147} \pmod{1000}.

Solution 3 (Roots of Unity)

Notice that

1w+z=w+zwz    0=w2+wz+z2=w3z3wz.\frac1{w+z} = \frac{w+z}{wz} \implies 0 = w^2 + wz + z^2 = \frac{w^3-z^3}{w-z}. Hence, w=ze2πi/3,ze4πi/3w=ze^{2\pi i/3},ze^{4\pi i/3}, and PP is an equilateral triangle with circumradius 20142014. Then,

[P]=3220142sinπ3=3100723,[P]=\frac{3}{2}\cdot 2014^2\cdot\sin\frac{\pi}3=3\cdot 1007^2\sqrt3, and the answer is 310072372147(mod1000)3\cdot 1007^2\equiv 3\cdot 7^2\equiv\boxed{147}\pmod{1000}.

Solution 4 (Slick)

I find that generally, the trick to these kinds of AIME problems is to interpret the problem geometrically, and that is just what I did here. Looking at the initial equation, this seems like a difficult task, but rearranging yields a nicer equation:

1z+w=1z+1w\frac1{z+w}=\frac1z+\frac1w wz+w=wz+1\frac w{z+w}=\frac wz+1 wz+w=w+zz\frac w{z+w}=\frac{w+z}z w0w(z)=(z)w(z)0\frac{w-0}{w-(-z)}=\frac{(-z)-w}{(-z)-0} We can interpret the difference of two complex numbers as a vector from one to the other, and we can interpret the quotient as a vector with an angle equal to the angle between the two vectors. Therefore, after labeling the complex numbers with WW (ww), VV (z-z), and OO (00), we can interpret the above equation to mean that the OWV=OVW\angle OWV=\angle OVW, and hence triangle OWVOWV is isosceles, so length OWOW = OVOV. Rearranging the equation

w0w(z)=(z)w(z)0,\frac{w-0}{w-(-z)}=\frac{(-z)-w}{(-z)-0}, we find that

(w0)((z)0)=(w(z))2.(w-0)((-z)-0)=-(w-(-z))^2. Taking the magnitude of both sides and using the fact that OW=OV    w0=(z)0OW=OV\implies |w-0|=|(-z)-0|, we find that

w02=w(z)2,|w-0|^2=|w-(-z)|^2, so length OW=VWOW=VW and triangle OWVOWV is equilateral. There are only two possible WW's for which OWVOWV is equilateral, lying on either side of OVOV. After drawing these points on the circle of radius 2014 centered at the origin, it is easy to see that zz and the two ww's form an equilateral triangle (this can be verified by simple angle chasing). Drawing a perpendicular bisector of one of the sides and using 30-60-90 triangles shows that the side length of this triangle is 201432014\sqrt3 and hence its area is 3(20143)24=1473+1000k3,\frac{\sqrt3(2014\sqrt3)^2}4=\boxed{147}\sqrt3+1000k\sqrt3, for some integer kk.

~SymbolicPermutation

Notes

This problem is killed by polar coordinates (complex numbers) . Solve using cosine-i-sine.