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2005 AMC 12A Problems/Problem 24

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Problem

Let P(x)=(x-1)(x-2)(x-3). For how many polynomials Q(x) does there exist a polynomial R(x) of degree 3 such that P(Q(x))=P(x)* R(x)?


\mathrm {(A) } 19 \qquad \mathrm {(B) } 22 \qquad \mathrm {(C) } 24 \qquad \mathrm {(D) } 27 \qquad \mathrm {(E) } 32

Solution

Since R(x) has degree three, then P(x)\cdot R(x) has degree six. Thus, P(Q(x)) has degree six, so Q(x) must have degree two, since P(x) has degree three.

P(Q(1))=(Q(1)-1)(Q(1)-2)(Q(1)-3)=P(1)\cdot R(1)=0,
P(Q(2))=(Q(2)-1)(Q(2)-2)(Q(2)-3)=P(2)\cdot R(2)=0,
P(Q(3))=(Q(3)-1)(Q(3)-2)(Q(3)-3)=P(3)\cdot R(3)=0.

Hence, we conclude Q(1), Q(2), and Q(3) must each be 1, 2, or 3. Since a quadratic is uniquely determined by three points, there can be 3*3*3 = 27 different quadratics Q(x) after each of the values of Q(1), Q(2), and Q(3) are chosen.


However, we have included Q(x) which are not quadratics. Namely,

Q(1)=Q(2)=Q(3)=1 \Rightarrow Q(x)=1,
Q(1)=Q(2)=Q(3)=2 \Rightarrow Q(x)=2,
Q(1)=Q(2)=Q(3)=3 \Rightarrow Q(x)=3,
Q(1)=1, Q(2)=2, Q(3)=3 \Rightarrow Q(x)=x,
Q(1)=3, Q(2)=2, Q(3)=1 \Rightarrow Q(x)=4-x.

Clearly, we could not have included any other constant functions. For any linear function, we have 2\cdot Q(2) = Q(1) + Q(3). Again, it is pretty obvious that we have not included any other linear functions. Therefore, the desired answer is 27 - 5 = 22 \mathrm{(B)}.

See also

2005 AMC 12A (ProblemsResources)
Preceded by
Problem 23
Followed by
Problem 25
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
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