AoPSWiki
Want to learn how to tackle those tough AMC/AIME/Olympiad counting and probability problems? Check out Art of Problem Solving's Intermediate Counting & Probability by David Patrick.
Personal tools

2009 AMC 12B Problems/Problem 24

From AoPSWiki

Problem

For how many values of x in [0,\pi] is \sin^{ - 1}(\sin 6x) = \cos^{ - 1}(\cos x)? Note: The functions \sin^{ - 1} = \arcsin and \cos^{ - 1} = \arccos denote inverse trigonometric functions.

\textbf{(A)}\ 3\qquad \textbf{(B)}\ 4\qquad \textbf{(C)}\ 5\qquad \textbf{(D)}\ 6\qquad \textbf{(E)}\ 7

Solution

First of all, we have to agree on the range of \sin^{-1} and \cos^{-1}. This should have been a part of the problem statement -- but as it is missing, we will assume the most common definition: \forall x: -\pi/2 \leq \sin^{-1}(x) \leq \pi/2 and \forall x: 0\leq \cos^{-1}(x) \leq \pi.

Hence we get that \forall x\in[0,\pi]: \cos^{ - 1}(\cos x) = x, thus our equation simplifies to \sin^{ - 1}(\sin 6x) = x.

Consider the function f(x) = \sin^{ - 1}(\sin 6x)  - x. We are looking for roots of f on [0,\pi].

By analyzing properties of \sin and \sin^{-1} (or by computing the derivative of f) one can discover the following properties of f:

  • f(0)=0.
  • f is increasing and then decreasing on [0,\pi/6].
  • f is decreasing and then increasing on [\pi/6,2\pi/6].
  • f is increasing and then decreasing on [2\pi/6,3\pi/6].

For x=\pi/6 we have f(x) = \sin^{-1} (\sin \pi) - \pi/6 = -\pi/6 < 0. Hence f has exactly one root on (0,\pi/6).

For x=2\pi/6 we have f(x) = \sin^{-1} (\sin 2\pi) - 2\pi/6 = -2\pi/6 < 0. Hence f is negative on the entire interval [\pi/6,2\pi/6].

Now note that \forall t: \sin^{-1}(t) \leq \pi/2. Hence for x > 3\pi/6 we have f(x) < 0, and we can easily check that f(3\pi/6)<0 as well.

Thus the only unknown part of f is the interval (2\pi/6,3\pi/6). On this interval, f is negative in both endpoints, and we know that it is first increasing and then decreasing. Hence there can be zero, one, or two roots on this interval.

To prove that there are two roots, it is enough to find any x from this interval such that f(x)>0.

A good guess is its midpoint, x=5\pi/12, where the function \sin^{-1}(\sin 6x) has its local maximum. We can evaluate: f(x) = \sin^{-1}(\sin 5\pi/2) - 5\pi/12 = \pi/2 - 5\pi/12 = \pi/12 > 0.

Summary: The function f has \boxed{4} roots on [0,\pi]: the first one is 0, the second one is in (0,\pi/6), and the last two are in (2\pi/6,3\pi/6).

See Also

2009 AMC 12B (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
Want to learn how to tackle those tough AMC/AIME/Olympiad counting and probability problems? Check out Art of Problem Solving's Intermediate Counting & Probability by David Patrick.
© Copyright 2008 AoPS Incorporated. All Rights Reserved. • FoundationPrivacyContact Us