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1992 AIME Problems/Problem 10

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Problem

Consider the region A in the complex plane that consists of all points z such that both \frac{z}{40} and \frac{40}{\overline{z}} have real and imaginary parts between 0 and 1, inclusive. What is the integer that is nearest the area of A?

Solution

Let z=a+bi \implies \frac{z}{40}=\frac{a}{40}+\frac{b}{40}i. Since 0\leq \frac{a}{40},\frac{b}{40}\leq 1 we have the inequality 0\leq a,b \leq 40which is a square of side length 40.

Also, \frac{40}{\overline{z}}=\frac{40}{a-bi}=\frac{40a}{a^2+b^2}+\frac{40b}{a^2+b^2}i so we have 0\leq a,b \leq \frac{a^2+b^2}{40}, which leads to:(a-20)^2+b^2\geq 20^2 a^2+(b-20)^2\geq 20^2

We graph them:

Image:AIME_1992_Solution_10.png

We want the area outside the two circles but inside the square. Doing a little geometry, the area of the intersection of those three graphs is 40^2-\frac{40^2}{4}-\frac{1}{2}\pi 20^2\approx 571.68

\boxed{572}

See also

1992 AIME (ProblemsResources)
Preceded by
Problem 9
Followed by
Problem 11
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