1984 AHSME Problems/Problem 29
Problem
Find the largest value for for pairs of real numbers
which satisfy
.
Solution
Let , so that
. Substituting this into the given equation
yields
. Multiplying this out and forming it into a quadratic yields
.
We want to be a real number, so we must have the discriminant
.
The discriminant is
. Therefore, we must have
, or
. The roots of this quadratic, using the quadratic formula, are
, so the quadratic can be factored as
. We can now separate this into
cases:
Case 1:
Then, both terms in the factored quadratic are negative, so the inequality doesn't hold.
Case 2:
Then, the first term is positive and the second is negative and the second is positive, so the inequality holds.
Case 3:
Then, both terms are positive, so the inequality doesn't hold.
Also, when or
, the equality holds.
Therefore, we must have , and the maximum value of
is
.
Solution 2
The equation represents a circle of radius centered at
. To find the maximal
with
is equivalent to finding the maximum slope of a line passing through the origin
and intersecting the circle. The steepest such line is tangent to the circle at some point
. We have
,
,
because the line is tangent to the circle. Using the pythagorean theorem, we have
.
The slope we are looking for is equivalent to where
. Using tangent addition,
So is the answer
Solution 3
Following the steps of Solution 2, we get . Let
. Based on the distance to the origin and to the centre of the circle
Expanding the latter and substituting the former into the equation gives .
. We can square this and remove the 1st equation to get
, or
.
Substitute to get
Since and
are symmetric, we want
to be the lower number to maximize
, so
and
.
See Also
1984 AHSME (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 28 |
Followed by Problem 30 | |
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