2006 1 Elementary Ineq
2006 1 Elementary Ineq
2006 1 Elementary Ineq
Ravi Boppana recently found a beautiful solution to this very di¢ cult question,
based on the following lemma.
Lemma 1. For any positive real numbers a1 ; a2 ; :::; an and any real numbers
x1 ; x2 ; :::; xn , the inequality
X
xi xj min(ai ; aj ) 0 (2)
1 i;j n
holds.
The aim of this paper is to present some applications and re…nements of
(2), which will lead to an even stronger form of (1). We will also discuss some
related problems from various mathematical contests.
X X Z 1
xi xj min(ai ; aj ) = xi [0;ai ] (t) xj [0;aj ] (t) dt =
1 i;j n 1 i;j n 0
Z 1X n
2
= (xi [0;ai ] (t)) dt 0
0 i=1
Since Z max1 i n Xn n
X
( xi [0;ai ] (t)) dt = ai xi ;
0 i=1 i=1
Show that the equality holds if and only if there exists a partition
PA1 ; A2 ; : : : ; Ak
of the set f1; 2; :::; ng such that for all i with 1 i k we have j2Ai xj = 0
and aj1 = aj2 if j1 ; j2 2 Ai .
(Gabriel Dospinescu, Mathlinks Contest)
Solution. Let us use the formula
ai + aj jai aj j
min(ai ; aj ) =
2
in (3). Since
n
! n
!
X X X
xi xj (ai + aj ) = 2 xi ai xi = 0;
1 i;j n i=1 i=1
(Poland, 1999)
Solution. Of course, by considering M ai and M bj where M is the
greatest number among all 2n numbers, we may assume that ai ; bj 0.
First of all, we note that the inequality is equivalent to
X X X
jai aj j + jbi bj j 2 jai bj j:
1 i;j n 1 i;j n 1 i;j n
A simple look at (3) shows now that (5) is a sister of the classical inequality
x2 + y 2 2xy. Indeed, (5) can be rewritten in the form
Z 1 Z 1 Z 1
2 2
f (x) dx + g (x) dx 2 f (x)g(x) dx;
0 0 0
Pn Pn
where f = i=1 [0;ai ] and g R= i=1 [0;bi ] .
The last inequality is easy to
1
prove, since it is equivalent to 0 (f (x) g(x))2 dx 0, which is clearly true.
Observe that the same method that was used to …nd a re…nement of (2)
allows here to prove the stronger inequality
X X Pn Pn 2
( i=1 ai i=1 bi )
jai bj j (jai aj j + jbi bj j) + :
max1 i n max(ai ; bi )
1 i;j n 1 i<j n
(Don Zagier)
Solution. It would be interesting to …nd another proof to this inequality,
but it seems that any attempt to prove it without using (3) fails. Anyway, using
(3) the problem becomes very simple. Indeed, the inequality reduces to
Z 1 Z 1 Z 1 2
2 2
f (x) dx g (x) dx f (x)g(x) dx ;
0 0 0
x3 + y 3 + z 3 + 3xyz x2 (y + z) + y 2 (z + x) + z 2 (x + y)
There are countless examples and we invite the reader to …nd other “new”
inequalities.
One could try at this moment to prove that the matrix ((min(xi ; xj ) min(1; xi xj ))1 i;j n
has all eigenvalues nonnegative, but this is not easy at all (at least, we could not
…nd a proof of this assertion yet). Ravi Boppana’s observation is the following
strange identity.
Lemma 2. For all positive real numbers x; y the following identity holds
jx 1j jy 1j
min(x; y) min(1; xy) = f (x)f (y) min ;
min(x; 1) min(y; 1)
which is nothing else than (2) disguised. The solution of the celebrated USAMO
2000 problem ends here.
An interesting consequence
We will end this note with an unexpected problem, which is a direct consequence
of (1), but whose statement does not suggest this fact. Unfortunately, it seems
very di¢ cult to …nd a solution di¤erent from the one that reduces the problem
to (1).
Problem 4. Let x1 ; x2 ; :::; xn be positive real numbers satisfying
X X
j1 xi xj j = jxi xj j:
1 i;j n 1 i;j n
n n
!2
X X X X
2
2n xi jxi xj j n + xi j1 xi xj j:
i=1 1 i;j n i=1 1 i;j n
Pn
UsingPthe hypothesis, we now conclude that ( i=1 xi n)2 0, which shows
n
that i=1 xi = n.
That is how a simple identity comes handy in solving a variety of di¢ cult
problems. The readers will certainly discover other problems that can be solved
using these ideas and we strongly encourage them to search for di¤erent solu-
tions.