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stevengoh911
Jul 10th, 2007, 10:07 AM
Given
x,y ∈ [0,2c]
f(x),g(y) ∈ [0,2c]
Show
| xy-f(x)+g(y)|≥ cē
exist
I don't really get this question.
Please help me
krtxmrtz
Jul 11th, 2007, 04:01 AM
Given
x,y ∈ [0,2c]
f(x),g(y) ∈ [0,2c]
Show
| xy-f(x)+g(y)|≥ cē
exist
I don't really get this question.
Please help meWelcome to the forums.
Is the question show that AT LEAST ONE PAIR of values (x,y) exists that verify the above inequality?
jemidiah
Jul 12th, 2007, 12:43 AM
I think it's just asking you to show that, no matter what functions f and g are used, there MUST be a pair of x and y that satisfy the given inequality. If that's exactly what's written, the writer should word it better IMO.
Partial Solution:
Let x,y = 2c
xy = 4c^2
In the worst case, [-f(x) + g(y)] = [-2c + 0] = -2c
(I'm gonna assume c>0 since it's on the right side of the interval, though I'm pretty sure this will all work even if c is negative; c=0 is trivial)
|4c^2-2c| >= c^2 -> (i) 4c^2-2c >= c^2 or (ii) 4c^2-2c <= -c^2
(i) 4c^2-2c >= c^2 -> 3c^2-2c >= 0 -> 3c-2 >= 0 -> 3c >= 2 -> c >= 2/3
(ii) 4c^2-2c <= -c^2 -> 5c^2-2c <= 0 -> 5c-2 <= 0 -> 5c <= 2 -> c <= 2/5
So, for c >= 2/3 or c <= 2/5 [c>=0 as noted above], the statement is true for x,y = 2c, no matter what functions f and g are used.
Every attempt I make at getting into the rest of the range seems to end in a huge number of sub-cases, so I'm probably missing something.
That's my take on it.
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