Saturday, January 16, 2016

IMO Inequality Problem

Let $a,\,b,\,c$ be real numbers greater than $2$ such that $\dfrac{1}{a}+\dfrac{1}{b}+\dfrac{1}{c}=1$.

Prove that $(a-2)(b-2)(c-2)\le 1$.

My solution:

Note that

$(a−2)(b−2)(c−2)$

$=abc\left(\dfrac{a-2}{a}\right)\left(\dfrac{b-2}{b}\right)\left(\dfrac{c-2}{c}\right)$

$=abc\left(1-\dfrac{2}{a}\right)\left(1-\dfrac{2}{b}\right)\left(1-\dfrac{2}{c}\right)$

$=abc\left(\dfrac{1}{a}+\dfrac{1}{b}+\dfrac{1}{c}-\dfrac{2}{a}\right)\left(\dfrac{1}{a}+\dfrac{1}{b}+\dfrac{1}{c}-\dfrac{2}{b}\right)\left(\dfrac{1}{a}+\dfrac{1}{b}+\dfrac{1}{c}-\dfrac{2}{c}\right)$

$=abc\left(\dfrac{1}{b}+\dfrac{1}{c}-\dfrac{1}{a}\right)\left(\dfrac{1}{a}+\dfrac{1}{c}-\dfrac{1}{b}\right)\left(\dfrac{1}{a}+\dfrac{1}{b}-\dfrac{1}{c}\right)$

We now use the famous identity that says for all real and positive $x,\,y$ and $z$, we have

$xyz\ge (x+y-z)(x+z-y)(y+z-x)$

In our case, we have $x=\dfrac{1}{a},\,y=\dfrac{1}{b},\,z=\dfrac{1}{c}$ and so we get

$\dfrac{1}{abc}\ge \left(\dfrac{1}{a}+\dfrac{1}{b}-\dfrac{1}{c}\right)\left(\dfrac{1}{a}+\dfrac{1}{c}-\dfrac{1}{b}\right)\left(\dfrac{1}{b}+\dfrac{1}{c}-\dfrac{1}{a}\right)$

i.e.

$abc\left(\dfrac{1}{a}+\dfrac{1}{b}-\dfrac{1}{c}\right)\left(\dfrac{1}{a}+\dfrac{1}{c}-\dfrac{1}{b}\right)\left(\dfrac{1}{b}+\dfrac{1}{c}-\dfrac{1}{a}\right)\le 1$

The proof is then follows.

Equality occurs when $a=b=c=3$.


2 comments:

  1. Aww...thank you Michelle for your nice compliment, I appreciate it!

    ReplyDelete