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1997 AIME Problems/Problem 11

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Problem

Let x=\frac{\sum_{n=1}^{44} \cos n^\circ}{\sum_{n=1}^{44} \sin n^\circ}. What is the greatest integer that does not exceed 100x?

Contents


Solution

Solution 1

\begin{eqnarray*} x &=& \frac {\sum_{n = 1}^{44} \cos n^\circ}{\sum_{n = 1}^{44} \sin n^\circ} = \frac {\cos 1 + \cos...

Using the identity \sin a + \sin b = 2\sin \frac{a+b}2 \cos \frac{a-b}{2} \Longrightarrow \sin x + \cos x = \sin x + \sin (90-x) = 2 \sin 45 \cos (45-x) = \sqrt{2} \cos (45-x), that summation reduces to

\begin{eqnarray*}x &=& \left(\frac {1}{\sqrt {2}}\right)\left(\frac {(\cos 1 + \cos2 + \dots + \cos44) + (\sin1 + \si...

That fraction is x! Therefore, \begin{eqnarray*}x &=& \left(\frac {1}{\sqrt {2}}\right)\left(1 + x\right)\\\frac {1}{\sqrt {2}} &=& x\left(\...

Solution 2

A slight variant of the above solution, note that

\begin{eqnarray*}\sum_{n=1}^{44} \cos n + \sum_{n=1}^{44} \sin n &=& \sum_{n=1}^{44} \sin n + \sin(90-n)\\&=&...

This is the ratio we are looking for. x reduces to \frac{1}{\sqrt{2} - 1} = \sqrt{2} + 1, and \lfloor 100(\sqrt{2} + 1)\rfloor = \boxed{241}.

Solution 3

Consider the sum \sum_{n = 1}^{44} \text{cis } n^\circ. The fraction is given by the real part divided by the imaginary part.

The sum can be written - 1 + \sum_{n = 0}^{44} \text{cis } n^\circ = - 1 + \frac {\text{cis } 45^\circ - 1}{\text{cis } 1^\circ - 1} (by De Moivre's Theorem with geometric series)

= - 1 + \frac {\frac {\sqrt {2}}{2} - 1 + \frac {i \sqrt {2}}{2}}{\text{cis } 1^\circ - 1} = - 1 + \frac {\left( \frac {\sqrt... (after multiplying by complex conjugate)

= - 1 + \frac {\left( \frac {\sqrt {2}}{2} - 1 \right) (\cos 1^\circ - 1) + \frac {\sqrt {2}}{2}\sin 1^\circ + i\left( \left(...

= - \frac {1}{2} - \frac {\sqrt {2}}{4} - \frac {i\sqrt {2}}{4} + \frac {\sin 1^\circ \left( \frac {\sqrt {2}}{2} + i\left( 1...

Using the tangent half-angle formula, this becomes \left( - \frac {1}{2} + \frac {\sqrt {2}}{4}[\cot (1/2^\circ) - 1] \right) + i\left( \frac {1}{2}\cot (1/2^\circ) - \frac {\s....

Dividing the two parts and multiplying each part by 4, the fraction is \frac { - 2 + \sqrt {2}[\cot (1/2^\circ) - 1]}{2\cot (1/2^\circ) - \sqrt {2}[\cot (1/2^\circ) + 1]}.

Although an exact value for \cot (1/2^\circ) in terms of radicals will be difficult, this is easily known: it is really large!

So treat it as though it were \infty. The fraction is approximated by \frac {\sqrt {2}}{2 - \sqrt {2}} = \frac {\sqrt {2}(2 + \sqrt {2})}{2} = 1 + \sqrt {2}\Rightarrow \boxed{241}.

See also

1997 AIME (ProblemsResources)
Preceded by
Problem 10
Followed by
Problem 12
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
Want to learn how to tackle those tough MATHCOUNTS and AMC counting and probability problems? Check out Art of Problem Solving's Introduction to Counting & Probability by David Patrick.
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