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- Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!gatech!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!uunet!questrel!chris
- From: chris@questrel.com (Chris Cole)
- Subject: rec.puzzles Archive (competition), part 10 of 35
- Message-ID: <puzzles/archive/competition/part5_745653851@questrel.com>
- Followup-To: rec.puzzles
- Summary: This is part of an archive of questions
- and answers that may be of interest to
- puzzle enthusiasts.
- Part 1 contains the index to the archive.
- Read the rec.puzzles FAQ for more information.
- Sender: chris@questrel.com (Chris Cole)
- Reply-To: archive-comment@questrel.com
- Organization: Questrel, Inc.
- References: <puzzles/archive/Instructions_745653851@questrel.com>
- Date: Wed, 18 Aug 1993 06:05:00 GMT
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Expires: Thu, 1 Sep 1994 06:04:11 GMT
- Lines: 539
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu rec.puzzles:25008 news.answers:11528 rec.answers:1928
-
- Archive-name: puzzles/archive/competition/part5
- Last-modified: 17 Aug 1993
- Version: 4
-
-
- ==> competition/tests/math/putnam/putnam.1992.p <==
- Problem A1
-
- Prove that f(n) = 1 - n is the only integer-valued function defined on
- the integers that satisfies the following conditions.
- (i) f(f(n)) = n, for all integers n;
- (ii) f(f(n + 2) + 2) = n for all integers n;
- (iii) f(0) = 1.
-
-
- Problem A2
-
- Define C(alpha) to be the coefficient of x^1992 in the power series
- expansion about x = 0 of (1 + x)^alpha. Evaluate
-
- \int_0^1 C(-y-1) ( 1/(y+1) + 1/(y+2) + 1/(y+3) + ... + 1/(y+1992) ) dy.
-
-
- Problem A3
-
- For a given positive integer m, find all triples (n,x,y) of positive
- integers, with n relatively prime to m, which satisfy (x^2 + y^2)^m = (xy)^n.
-
-
- Problem A4
-
- Let f be an infinitely differentiable real-valued function defined on
- the real numbers. If
-
- f(1/n) = n^2/(n^2 + 1), n = 1,2,3,...,
-
- compute the values of the derivatives f^(k)(0), k = 1,2,3,... .
-
-
- Problem A5
-
- For each positive integer n, let
-
- a_n = { 0 if the number of 1's in the binary representation of n is even,
- 1 if the number of 1's in the binary representation of n is odd.
-
- Show that there do not exist positive integers k and m such that
-
- a_{k+j} = a_{k+m+j} = a_{k+2m+j}, for 0 <= j <= m - 1.
-
-
- Problem A6
-
- Four points are chosen at random on the surface of a sphere. What is the
- probability that the center of the sphere lies inside the tetrahedron
- whose vertices are at the four points? (It is understood that each point
- is independently chosen relative to a uniform distribution on the sphere.)
-
-
- Problem B1
-
- Let S be a set of n distinct real numbers. Let A_S be the set of numbers
- that occur as averages of two distinct elements of S. For a given n >= 2,
- what is the smallest possible number of distinct elements in A_S?
-
-
- Problem B2
-
- For nonnegative integers n and k, define Q(n,k) to be the coefficient of
- x^k in the expansion of (1+x+x^2+x^3)^n. Prove that
-
- Q(n,k) = \sum_{j=0}^n {n \choose j} {n \choose k - 2j},
-
- where {a \choose b} is the standard binomial coefficient. (Reminder: For
- integers a and b with a >= 0, {a \choose b} = a!/b!(a-b)! for 0 <= b <= a,
- and {a \choose b} = 0 otherwise.)
-
-
- Problem B3
-
- For any pair (x,y) of real numbers, a sequence (a_n(x,y))_{n>=0} is
- defined as follows:
-
- a_0(x,y) = x
- a_{n+1}(x,y) = ( (a_n(x,y))^2 + y^2 ) / 2, for all n >= 0.
-
- Find the area of the region { (x,y) | (a_n(x,y))_{n>=0} converges }.
-
-
- Problem B4
-
- Let p(x) be a nonzero polynomial of degree less than 1992 having no
- nonconstant factor in common with x^3 - x. Let
-
- ( d^1992 / dx^1992 ) ( p(x) / x^3 - x ) = f(x) / g(x)
-
- for polynomials f(x) and g(x). Find the smallest possible degree of f(x).
-
-
- Problem B5
-
- Let D_n denote the value of the (n-1) by (n-1) determinant
-
- | 3 1 1 1 ... 1 |
- | 1 4 1 1 ... 1 |
- | 1 1 5 1 ... 1 |
- | 1 1 1 6 ... 1 |
- | . . . . ... . |
- | 1 1 1 1 ... n+1 |
-
- Is the set {D_n/n!}_{n >= 2} bounded?
-
-
- Problem B6
-
- Let M be a set of real n by n matrices such that
- (i) I \in M, where I is the n by n identity matrix;
- (ii) if A \in M and B \in M, then either AB \in M or -AB \in M, but not both;
- (iii) if A \in M and B \in M, then either AB = BA or AB = -BA;
- (iv) if A \in M and A \noteq I, there is at least one B \in M such that
- AB = -BA.
-
- Prove that M contains at most n^2 matrices.
-
- ==> competition/tests/math/putnam/putnam.1992.s <==
- Now the unofficial solutions. Thanks to Noam Elkies for the B6 solution;
- thanks also to Peter Akemann, Greg John, and Peter Montgomery.
-
- The Putnam exam deserves criticism this year for an exceptional number
- of typos and poorly worded problems. How can someone taking the Putnam
- be sure that his solutions will be graded carefully, if the exam itself
- shows sloppy typography, grammar, and style?
-
-
- Problem A1
-
- Prove that f(n) = 1 - n is the only integer-valued function defined on
- the integers that satisfies the following conditions.
- (i) f(f(n)) = n, for all integers n;
- (ii) f(f(n + 2) + 2) = n for all integers n;
- (iii) f(0) = 1.
-
- (The comma in (i) is wrong. Either ``conditions.'' should be
- ``conditions:'' or the semicolons should be periods. Little things...)
-
- Solution: Certainly if f(n) = 1 - n then (i), (ii), and (iii) hold.
- Conversely, say (i), (ii), and (iii) hold. We show that f(k) = 1 - k
- and f(1 - k) = k for every k >= 0. For k = 0 and 1 we have f(0) = 1 and
- f(1) = f(f(0)) = 0. For k >= 2, by induction we have f(k - 2) = 3 - k
- and f(3 - k) = k - 2. Note that f(n + 2) + 2 = f(f(f(n + 2) + 2)) = f(n).
- So f(k) = f(k - 2) - 2 = 1 - k and f(1 - k) = f(3 - k) + 2 = k as desired.
- As k and 1 - k for k >= 1 cover the integers, we are done.
-
-
- Problem A2
-
- Define C(alpha) to be the coefficient of x^1992 in the power series
- expansion about x = 0 of (1 + x)^alpha. Evaluate
-
- \int_0^1 C(-y-1) ( 1/(y+1) + 1/(y+2) + 1/(y+3) + ... + 1/(y+1992) ) dy.
-
- Solution: C(alpha) is given by the usual binomial coefficient formula
- {alpha \choose 1992} = \alpha (\alpha - 1) ... (\alpha - 1991) / 1992!.
- Hence C(-y-1) = (-y-1)(-y-2)...(-y-1992)/1992! = (y+1)...(y+1992)/1992!.
- Set f(y) = (y+1)(y+2)...(y+1992). Now f has logarithmic derivative
- f'/f = ( 1/(y+1) + 1/(y+2) + ... + 1/(y+1992) ). Hence our integral
- equals \int_0^1 f(y)/1992! f'(y)/f(y) dy = \int_0^1 f'(y) dy/1992! =
- (f(1) - f(0))/1992! = (1993! - 1992!)/1992! = 1993 - 1 = 1992.
-
-
- Problem A3
-
- For a given positive integer m, find all triples (n,x,y) of positive
- integers, with n relatively prime to m, which satisfy (x^2 + y^2)^m = (xy)^n.
-
- Solution: Certainly xy < x^2 + y^2 so m < n. Put n = m + k, k > 0.
- Let d be the greatest common divisor of x and y. Say x = ds, y = dt.
- Now d^{2m}(s^2 + t^2)^m = d^{2n}(st)^n, so (s^2 + t^2)^m = d^{2k}(st)^n.
- If a prime p divides s then p divides d^{2k}(st)^n = (s^2 + t^2)^m,
- so p must divide t. But s and t are relatively prime. Hence s = 1.
- Similarly t = 1. So d^{2k} = 2^m. Hence d is a power of 2, say d = 2^j,
- and m = 2jk. As n = m + k = 2jk + k we see that k is a common factor of
- m and n. Thus k = 1. So m = 2j, n = 2j + 1, x = y = d = 2^j. If m is odd
- then there are no solutions; if m is even then the only possible solution
- is (m + 1,2^{m/2},2^{m/2}). This does satisfy the given conditions.
-
-
- Problem A4
-
- Let f be an infinitely differentiable real-valued function defined on
- the real numbers. If
-
- f(1/n) = n^2/(n^2 + 1), n = 1,2,3,...,
-
- compute the values of the derivatives f^(k)(0), k = 1,2,3,... .
-
- (``Let f be a foo. If bar, compute blah.'' Does this mean that one need
- only answer the question if ``bar'' happens to be true? May one choose
- his favorite f, such as f(x) = x, observe that it does not satisfy ``bar'',
- and [successfully] answer the question without computing anything?
- ``If ..., compute'' should be ``Assume ... . Compute''.)
-
- Solution: We first observe that the function g(x) = 1/(1 + x^2) satisfies
- all the known properties of f: it is infinitely differentiable, and
- g(1/n) = n^2/(n^2 + 1). From the Taylor expansion of g around 0,
- g(x) = 1 - x^2 + x^4 - x^6 + ..., we see that g^(k)(0) is 0 for k odd,
- (-1)^{k/2}k! for k even.
-
- Can f differ from g in its derivatives at 0? The difference h = f - g
- is an infinitely differentiable function with roots at 1/n for every
- positive n. We show that any such function has all derivatives 0 at 0.
- Suppose not. Take the least k >= 0 for which h^(k)(0) is nonzero.
- Without loss of generality say it is positive. By continuity h^(k) is
- positive in an open interval U around 0. Let S be the set of positive
- elements of U. Now h^(k-1) is increasing on S, and by minimality of k
- we have h^(k-1)(0) = 0, so h^(k-1) is positive on S. Then h^(k-2) is
- increasing on S, and h^(k-2)(0) = 0, so h^(k-2) is positive on S. In
- general h^j is positive on S for j down from k to 0 by induction. In
- particular h is positive on S, but this is impossible, as 1/n is in S
- for n sufficiently large.
-
- Thus f has all the same derivatives as g: f^(k)(0) is 0 for k odd,
- (-1)^{k/2}k! for k even.
-
- Alternative solution:
- Let g(x) = 1/(1 + x^2). We may compute the derivatives as before, and again
- the problem reduces to showing that all derivatives of f(x)-g(x) = h(x)
- vanish at 0.
-
- By continuity, h^(0) vanishes at 0. We now proceed by induction using the
- nth mean value theorem, which states that h(x) = h(0) + h'(0) + ... +
- h^(n-1)(0)/(n-1)! + h^(n)(\theta)/n!, where 0 <= \theta <= x. By induction,
- the derivatives up to the (n-1)-th vanish at 0, and if we take x = 1, 1/2,
- ... we get h^(n)(\theta_n) = 0, where 0 <= \theta_n <= 1/n. Hence \{\theta_n\}
- tends to 0. But h is infinitely differentiable, so h^n is infinitely
- differentiable and hence continuous. It follows that h^(n)(0) = 0.
-
- Yet another solution:
- Consider only n divided by l.c.m/(1,2,\ldots,k).
- f^(k)(0) = \lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}
- ( \sum_{i=0}^k {k\choose i}(-1)^{i+1} f(i/n) ) / (1/n)^k
- = \lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}
- ( \sum_{i=0}^k {k\choose i}(-1)^{i+1} g(i/n) ) / (1/n)^k
- =g^{k}(0)= \cos(\pi k/2) k!
-
- Or replace n by n*l.c.m.(1,2,\ldots,k) in the above and allow n to be any
- positive integer.
-
- Problem A5
-
- For each positive integer n, let
-
- a_n = { 0 if the number of 1's in the binary representation of n is even,
- 1 if the number of 1's in the binary representation of n is odd.
-
- Show that there do not exist positive integers k and m such that
-
- a_{k+j} = a_{k+m+j} = a_{k+2m+j}, for 0 <= j <= m - 1.
-
- (Is every student supposed to know what the writer means by ``the binary
- representation of n''? Anyway, this problem is well known in some circles.
- I don't think Putnam writers should copy problems.)
-
- Solution: Let us suppose the opposite. Pick m minimal such that, for
- some k, a_{k+j} = a_{k+m+j} for every 0 <= j <= 2m - 1. The minimality
- guarantees that m is odd. (Indeed, say m = 2m'. If k = 2k' is even,
- then put j = 2j' for 0 <= j' <= m - 1 = 2m' - 1. Now a_n = a_{2n} so
- a_{k'+j'} = a_{k+j} = a_{k+m+j} = a_{k'+m'+j'} as desired. If on the
- other hand k = 2k' - 1 is odd, then put j = 2j' + 1 for 0 <= j' <= 2m' - 1.
- Now a_{k'+j'} = a_{k+j} = a_{k+m+j} = a_{k'+m'+j'} as desired.)
-
- We cannot have m = 1. Indeed, if a_k = a_{k+1} = a_{k+2}, then we have
- a_{2n} = a_{2n+1} for n = k/2 if k is even or n = (k+1)/2 if k is odd.
- But a_{2n} + a_{2n+1} = 1 always. Hence m is an odd number greater than 1.
-
- Define b_n = (a_n + a_{n-1}) mod 2. For 1 <= j <= 2m - 1 we have
- b_{k+j} = b_{k+m+j}. This range of j covers at least 5 values; we can
- certainly choose j so as to make k+j equal to 2 mod 4. Then k+m+j is
- odd. But b_n is 0 when n is 2 mod 4, and b_n is 1 when n is odd, so we
- have a contradiction.
-
-
- Problem A6
-
- Four points are chosen at random on the surface of a sphere. What is the
- probability that the center of the sphere lies inside the tetrahedron
- whose vertices are at the four points? (It is understood that each point
- is independently chosen relative to a uniform distribution on the sphere.)
-
- Solution: Pick three points A, B, C, and consider the spherical triangle
- T defined by those points. The center of the sphere lies in the convex
- hull of A, B, C, and another point P if and only if it lies in the convex
- hull of T and P. This happens if and only if P is antipodal to T. So the
- desired probability is the expected fraction of the sphere's surface area
- which is covered by T.
-
- Denote the antipode to a point P by P'. We consider the eight spherical
- triangles ABC, A'BC, AB'C, A'B'C, ABC', A'BC', AB'C', A'B'C'. Denote
- these by T_0, T_1, T_2, T_3, T_4, T_5, T_6, T_7; we regard each T_i
- as a function of the random variables A, B, C. There is an automorphism
- of our probability space defined by (A,B,C) -> (A,B,C'). Hence T_0 and
- T_4 have the same distribution, and similarly T_1 and T_5, T_2 and T_6,
- and T_3 and T_7. Of course the same applies to B, so that T_0 and T_2,
- T_1 and T_3, T_4 and T_6, and T_5 and T_7 all have the same distribution.
- Finally T_0 and T_1, T_2 and T_3, T_4 and T_5, and T_6 and T_7 all have
- the same distribution. We conclude that all the T_i have exactly the
- same distribution. In particular the fractional area A_i of T_i has the
- same distribution for all i.
-
- On the other hand the total fractional area of all the T_i is exactly
- 1: the eight triangles cover the sphere exactly once. Hence each T_i
- has expected fractional area 1/8. In particular, T_0, the probability we
- wanted, has expected value 1/8.
-
- Note that this proof does not require the full strength of uniform
- distribution in the usual measure; nor does it require independence
- between all the variables. It requires only certain automorphisms of
- the probability space.
-
-
- Problem B1
-
- Let S be a set of n distinct real numbers. Let A_S be the set of numbers
- that occur as averages of two distinct elements of S. For a given n >= 2,
- what is the smallest possible number of distinct elements in A_S?
-
- (``Smallest possible number of distinct elements in A_S''? Who talks
- about ``the number of _distinct_ elements'' of a set? How about just
- ``the number of elements''? Or ``the size''? Aargh. The quantifiers
- here are completely out of whack: n has to be fixed [not ``given'']
- before anything else, and it's not immediately clear that ``smallest
- possible'' refers to ``the minimum over all S''. Proposed rewrite:
- ``Fix n >= 2. For any set S of n real numbers, let A_S be the set of
- averages of two distinct elements of S. What is the minimum, over all
- S, of the size of A_S?'')
-
- Solution: We put the elements of S in order: s_1 < s_2 < ... < s_n.
- We have s_1 + s_2 < s_1 + s_3 < ... < s_1 + s_{n-1} < s_1 + s_n <
- s_2 + s_n < s_3 + s_n < ... < s_{n-1} + s_n. Hence the 2n - 3 averages
- (s_i + s_j)/2, i < j, with i = 1 or j = n, are all distinct. So A_S
- has size at least 2n - 3. This is achieved if, for instance,
- S = {1,2,...,n}.
-
-
- Problem B2
-
- For nonnegative integers n and k, define Q(n,k) to be the coefficient of
- x^k in the expansion of (1+x+x^2+x^3)^n. Prove that
-
- Q(n,k) = \sum_{j=0}^n {n \choose j} {n \choose k - 2j},
-
- where {a \choose b} is the standard binomial coefficient. (Reminder: For
- integers a and b with a >= 0, {a \choose b} = a!/b!(a-b)! for 0 <= b <= a,
- and {a \choose b} = 0 otherwise.)
-
- Solution: (1+x^2)(1+x) = 1+x+x^2+x^3, so (1+x^2)^n(1+x)^n = (1+x+x^2+x^3)^n,
- so (\sum {n\choose j} x^{2j}) (\sum {n\choose m} x^m) = \sum Q(n,k)x^k.
- The coefficient of x^k on the left is the sum of {n\choose j}{n\choose m}
- over all j,m with m + 2j = k, i.e., \sum_j {n\choose j}{n\choose k-2j}.
-
-
- Problem B3
-
- For any pair (x,y) of real numbers, a sequence (a_n(x,y))_{n>=0} is
- defined as follows:
-
- a_0(x,y) = x
- a_{n+1}(x,y) = ( (a_n(x,y))^2 + y^2 ) / 2, for all n >= 0.
-
- Find the area of the region { (x,y) | (a_n(x,y))_{n>=0} converges }.
-
- (The parentheses in (a_n(x,y))^2 are confusing, as the writer also
- uses parentheses to denote the entire sequence of a_n.)
-
- Solution: Note that (x,y) and (x,-y) produce the same sequence, and
- (-x,y) and (x,y) produce the same sequence after the first step. So
- we will restrict attention to nonnegative x and y and quadruple our
- final answer.
-
- Fix x and y. Set f(z) = ( z^2 + y^2 ) / 2, so that a_n(x,y) =
- f(a_{n-1}(x,y)). Now f'(z) = z, so f is increasing on the positive reals.
- So (a_n(x,y))_n is monotone---either increasing, decreasing, or constant.
- We consider several (non-exclusive) possibilities.
-
- Case 1. Say y > 1. Then f(z) > (1 + z^2)/2 + (y - 1) >= z + (y - 1), so
- a_n(x,y) increases by at least y - 1 at each step.
-
- Case 2. Say f(x) < x. Then we have 0 < a_n(x,y) < a_{n-1}(x,y) <= x for
- every n. (Indeed, for n = 1 we have 0 < f(x) < x. For n >= 2 we have
- a_{n-1}(x,y) < a_{n-2}(x,y) by induction. So a_n(x,y) < a_{n-1}(x,y),
- as f is increasing.) As (a_n(x,y))_n is decreasing and bounded below,
- it converges.
-
- Case 3. Say f(x) > x > 1. Define g(z) = f(z) - z, so that g(x) > 0.
- We have g'(z) = z - 1, so g is increasing past 1. Now a_n(x,y) >=
- x + ng(x). (Indeed, for n = 1 we have a_1(x,y) = f(x) = x + g(x).
- For n >= 2 set a = a_{n-1}(x,y). We have a >= x + (n-1)g(x) > x by
- induction. So g(a) > g(x), and a_n(x,y) = f(a) = a + g(a) > a + g(x) >=
- x + ng(x) as desired.) So a_n increases without bound.
-
- Case 4. Say x < 1, y < 1. Then f(x) < f(1) < (1 + 1)/2 = 1. Similarly
- a_n(x,y) < 1 for every n. As (a_n(x,y))_n is bounded and monotone, it
- converges.
-
- Let's put this all together. For y > 1 the sequence diverges. For y < 1
- and x < 1 the sequence does converge. For y < 1 and x > 1, the sequence
- converges if f(x) < x, and diverges if f(x) > x. The points we miss in
- this tally---y = 1, x = 1, f(x) = x---have zero total area.
-
- The condition f(x) < x is equivalent to (x-1)^2 + y^2 < 1, which
- describes a quarter-circle of radius 1 in the region y > 0, x > 1. Thus
- the total area for positive x and y is 1 (for the square y < 1, x < 1)
- plus pi/4 (for the quarter-circle). The final answer is quadruple this,
- or 4 + pi.
-
-
- Problem B4
-
- Let p(x) be a nonzero polynomial of degree less than 1992 having no
- nonconstant factor in common with x^3 - x. Let
-
- ( d^1992 / dx^1992 ) ( p(x) / (x^3 - x) ) = f(x) / g(x)
-
- for polynomials f(x) and g(x). Find the smallest possible degree of f(x).
-
- (The second sentence is backwards---``let'' should be followed
- immediately by the variable being introduced. Would you say ``Let
- 2 equal x + y for integers x and y''?)
-
- Solution: First divide p(x) by x^3 - x: p(x) = (x^3 - x)q(x) + r(x),
- with r of degree at most 2. Now f(x)/g(x) = D^1992 (q(x) + r(x)/(x^3-x))
- = D^1992 (r(x)/(x^3-x)), as q has degree less than 1992; here we write
- D for d/dx. We expand r(x)/(x^3-x) in partial fractions as -r(0)/x +
- r(1)/2(x-1) + r(-1)/2(x+1). Now the 1992nd derivative of this is
- Cr(0)/x^1993 + Cr(1)/(x-1)^1993 + Cr(-1)/(x+1)^1993 for a certain
- nonzero constant C which we don't care about. This then equals
- (Cr(0)(x^2-1)^1993 + Cr(1)(x^2+x)^1993 + Cr(-1)(x^2-x)^1993)/(x^3-x)^1993.
-
- The numerator and denominator here are coprime, for none of x, x-1, x+1
- divide the numerator. (If, for instance, x divided the numerator, then
- r(0) would have to be 0, but then p(x) would have a factor of x in
- common with x^3-x, contrary to hypothesis.) So f(x) is a multiple of
- the numerator and g(x) is a multiple of the denominator. Our question
- is thus ``What is the smallest possible degree of the polynomial P =
- U(x^2-1)^1993 + V(x^2+x)^1993 + W(x^2-x)^1993, over all U, V, W which
- can arise as U=Cr(0), V=Cr(1), W=Cr(-1)?''
-
- P has degree at most 2.1993. Its 2.1993 coefficient is U + V + W. Its
- 2.1993-1 coefficient is 1993V - 1993W. Its 2.1993-2 coefficient is
- -1993U + 1993.(1992/2)V + 1993.(1992/2)W. If all three of these are
- zero then by linear algebra all of U, V, W are zero, which is not
- possible. Hence P, and thus also f, has degree at least 2.1993-2, or
- double 1992. This is achieved if, for instance, p(x) = r(x) = 3x^2 - 2,
- so that r(0)+r(1)+r(-1)=-2+1+1=0 and r(1)=r(-1).
-
- (The degree restriction on p in this problem seems somewhat strange,
- though it simplifies the solution slightly. Noam Elkies notes that
- the ``nonzero constant C'' above will be zero---so that f will be 0---
- if we're working over a field with characteristic dividing 1992!.
- Should the problem have explicitly identified the ground field as
- the reals?)
-
-
- Problem B5
-
- Let D_n denote the value of the (n-1) by (n-1) determinant
-
- | 3 1 1 1 ... 1 |
- | 1 4 1 1 ... 1 |
- | 1 1 5 1 ... 1 |
- | 1 1 1 6 ... 1 |
- | . . . . ... . |
- | 1 1 1 1 ... n+1 |
-
- Is the set {D_n/n!}_{n >= 2} bounded?
-
- (``The value of the determinant''? Why not just ``the determinant''?
- Why talk about ``the set'' when it's much more common to talk about
- ``the sequence''? And where's the period on the first sentence?)
-
- Solution: No, it is the harmonic series.
-
- We subtract the first row from each of the other rows, to get a matrix
- 3 1 1 1 ... 1, -2 3 0 0 ... 0, -2 0 4 0 ... 0, ..., -2 0 0 0 ... n.
- Then we subtract 1/3 of the new second row from the first, 1/4 of the
- new third row from the first, and so on, to kill all the 1's along the
- top. We are left with a triangular matrix, with diagonal X 3 4 ... n,
- where X equals 3 - (-2)/3 - (-2)/4 - ... - (-2)/n =
- 3 + 2/3 + 2/4 + ... + 2/n = 2(1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + ... + 1/n). Thus
- the determinant is n! times 1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + ... + 1/n. Q. E. D.
-
-
- Problem B6
-
- Let M be a set of real n by n matrices such that
- (i) I \in M, where I is the n by n identity matrix;
- (ii) if A \in M and B \in M, then either AB \in M or -AB \in M, but not both;
- (iii) if A \in M and B \in M, then either AB = BA or AB = -BA;
- (iv) if A \in M and A \noteq I, there is at least one B \in M such that
- AB = -BA.
-
- Prove that M contains at most n^2 matrices.
-
- Solution (courtesy Noam Elkies): Fix A in M. By (iii) AB = eBA, where e
- is either +1 or -1, for any B in M. Then AAB = AeBA = eABA = e^2BAA = BAA.
- So A^2 commutes with any B in M. Of course the same is true of -A^2. On
- the other hand by (ii) A^2 or -A^2 is in M. Pick C = A^2 or C = -A^2 so
- that C is in M.
-
- If C is not I, then by (iv) we can find a B in M such that CB = -BC. But
- we know CB = BC for any B in M. Thus CB = 0, which is impossible, as by
- (ii) no two elements of M can multiply to 0.
-
- We conclude that C must be I. In other words, for any A in M, either A^2
- or -A^2 must be I.
-
- Now suppose M has more than n^2 matrices. The space of real n by n
- matrices has dimension n^2, so we can find a nontrivial linear relation
- \sum_{D in M} x_D D = 0. Pick such a relation with the smallest possible
- number of nonzero x_D. We will construct a smaller relation, obtaining a
- contradiction and finishing the proof.
-
- Pick an A with x_A nonzero, and multiply by it: \sum_{D in M} x_D DA = 0.
- In light of (ii) the matrices DA run over M modulo sign. Hence we have a
- new relation \sum_{E in M} y_E E = 0. The point of this transformation is
- that now the coefficient y_I of I is +- x_A, which is nonzero.
-
- Pick any C other than I such that y_C is nonzero. By (iv) pick B in M
- such that CB = -BC. Multiply \sum_{E in M} y_E E = 0 by B on both the left
- and the right, and add: \sum_{E in M} y_E (BE + EB) = 0. Now by (iii) we
- have BE + EB = (1 + e_{BE})BE, where e_{BE} is either +1 or -1. In
- particular e_{BI} = 1 (clear) and e_{BC} = -1 (by construction of B).
- So we get \sum_{E in M} y_E (1 + e_{BE}) BE = 0, where at least one term
- does not disappear and at least one term does disappear. As before the
- matrices BE run over M modulo sign. So we have a relation with fewer
- terms as desired.
-
-
- ---Dan Bernstein, brnstnd@ocf.berkeley.edu, 7 December 1992
-