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STEP2 2019 -- Pure Mathematics

STEP2 2019 — Section A (Pure Mathematics)

Section titled “STEP2 2019 — Section A (Pure Mathematics)”

Exam: STEP2  |  Year: 2019  |  Questions: Q1—Q8  |  Total marks per question: 20

All questions are pure mathematics. Solutions and examiner commentary are included below.

QTopicDifficultyKey Techniques
1代数与函数 (Algebra & Functions)Challenging乘积求导法则,切线方程建立,代数化简与因式分解,充要条件证明
2微积分 (Calculus)Challenging反函数的几何意义,面积加法原理,积分换元法,隐函数求值
3代数与函数 (Algebra & Functions)Challenging数学归纳法,三角不等式,多项式估值技巧,有理根定理
4三角学 (Trigonometry)Hard倍角公式连锁消去法,对数求导法,极限计算,无穷乘积与无穷级数
5数列与级数 (Sequences & Series)Challenging不动点方程,递推序列分析,判别式法,充要条件证明
6微分方程 (Differential Equations)Challenging积分因子法,变量代换,驻点与极值分析,定性微分方程理论
7几何与向量 (Geometry & Vectors)Challenging点积运算,向量模长计算,几何条件与向量条件的转化,对称性分析
8矩阵与线性代数 (Matrices & Linear Algebra)Hard矩阵乘法性质,初等矩阵分解,函数方程推理,行列式性质

Topic: 代数与函数 (Algebra & Functions)  |  Difficulty: Challenging  |  Marks: 20

1 Let f(x)=(xp)g(x)f(x) = (x - p)g(x), where gg is a polynomial. Show that the tangent to the curve y=f(x)y = f(x) at the point with x=ax = a, where apa \neq p, passes through the point (p,0)(p, 0) if and only if g(a)=0g'(a) = 0.

The curve CC has equation

y=A(xp)(xq)(xr),y = A(x - p)(x - q)(x - r),

where pp, qq and rr are constants with p<q<rp < q < r, and AA is a non-zero constant.

(i) The tangent to CC at the point with x=ax = a, where apa \neq p, passes through the point (p,0)(p, 0). Show that 2a=q+r2a = q + r and find an expression for the gradient of this tangent in terms of AA, qq and rr.

(ii) The tangent to CC at the point with x=cx = c, where crc \neq r, passes through the point (r,0)(r, 0). Show that this tangent is parallel to the tangent in part (i) if and only if the tangent to CC at the point with x=qx = q does not meet the curve again.

Hint

f(x)=g(x)+(xp)g(x)f'(x) = g(x) + (x - p)g'(x) [M1] Tangent passes through (a,(ap)g(a))(a, (a - p)g(a)) Equation of tangent is y=(g(a)+(ap)g(a))(xa)+(ap)g(a)y = (g(a) + (a - p)g'(a))(x - a) + (a - p)g(a) [M1] (or equivalent equation) [A1] Substitution of x=px = p into equation of tangent [E1] y=(ap)2g(a)y = -(a - p)^2 g'(a) Verification that if g(a)=0g'(a) = 0, then y=0y = 0 [E1] If y=0y = 0 then g(a)=0g'(a) = 0 because apa \neq p [E1 (AG)] [(6 marks)] (i) g(x)=A(xq)(xr)g(x) = A(x - q)(x - r) identified [M1] g(a)=02a=r+qg'(a) = 0 \Rightarrow 2a = r + q (legitimately obtained) [A1 (AG)] Gradient of tangent is g(a)+(ap)g(a)g(a) + (a - p)g'(a) =A(aq)(ar)= A(a - q)(a - r) [M1] =14A(rq)2= -\frac{1}{4}A(r - q)^2 [A1] [(4 marks)] (ii) By symmetry, the gradient of the second tangent is 14A(pq)2-\frac{1}{4}A(p - q)^2 (can be implied) [B1] Parallel iff (pq)2=(qr)2(p - q)^2 = (q - r)^2 [M1] qp=rq\Leftrightarrow q - p = r - q [A1] since p<q<rp < q < r. [E1] Tangent at x=qx = q, y=A(qp)(qr)(xq)y = A(q - p)(q - r)(x - q), [M1] Meets curve again when (qp)(qr)(xq)=(xp)(xr)(xq)(q - p)(q - r)(x - q) = (x - p)(x - r)(x - q) (qp)(qr)=(xp)(xr)\Leftrightarrow (q - p)(q - r) = (x - p)(x - r) since xqx \neq q [M1] (cancellation must be justified for M1, can be awarded if used correctly on (xq)2(xpr+q)(x - q)^2(x - p - r + q) later) (xq)(xpr+q)=0\Leftrightarrow (x - q)(x - p - r + q) = 0 [M1] x=p+rq\Leftrightarrow x = p + r - q or x=qx = q [A1] Therefore there is only one point of intersection between the tangent and the curve if and only if p+rq=qp + r - q = q, which is if and only if the [E1] tangents are parallel. [E1 (AG)] One E mark for each direction. [(10 marks)]

Model Solution

General result.

Since f(x)=(xp)g(x)f(x) = (x-p)g(x), by the product rule:

f(x)=g(x)+(xp)g(x)f'(x) = g(x) + (x-p)g'(x)

The point on the curve at x=ax = a is (a,  (ap)g(a))(a,\; (a-p)g(a)), and the gradient is f(a)=g(a)+(ap)g(a)f'(a) = g(a) + (a-p)g'(a). The tangent line at this point is:

y(ap)g(a)=(g(a)+(ap)g(a))(xa)y - (a-p)g(a) = \bigl(g(a) + (a-p)g'(a)\bigr)(x - a)

Setting x=px = p:

y=(ap)g(a)+(g(a)+(ap)g(a))(pa)y = (a-p)g(a) + \bigl(g(a) + (a-p)g'(a)\bigr)(p - a)

=(ap)g(a)(ap)g(a)(ap)2g(a)= (a-p)g(a) - (a-p)g(a) - (a-p)^2 g'(a)

=(ap)2g(a)= -(a-p)^2 g'(a)

Since apa \neq p, we have (ap)2>0(a-p)^2 > 0, so y=0y = 0 if and only if g(a)=0g'(a) = 0. \square

Part (i)

Here f(x)=A(xp)(xq)(xr)f(x) = A(x-p)(x-q)(x-r), so we identify g(x)=A(xq)(xr)g(x) = A(x-q)(x-r).

By the general result, the tangent at x=ax = a passes through (p,0)(p, 0) if and only if g(a)=0g'(a) = 0.

Computing g(x)g'(x):

g(x)=A[(xr)+(xq)]=A(2xqr)g'(x) = A\bigl[(x-r) + (x-q)\bigr] = A(2x - q - r)

Setting g(a)=0g'(a) = 0:

A(2aqr)=0A(2a - q - r) = 0

Since A0A \neq 0, we get 2a=q+r2a = q + r, i.e. a=q+r2a = \dfrac{q+r}{2}. \square

The gradient of the tangent is f(a)=g(a)+(ap)g(a)=g(a)+0=g(a)f'(a) = g(a) + (a-p)g'(a) = g(a) + 0 = g(a), so:

gradient=A(aq)(ar)\text{gradient} = A(a-q)(a-r)

With a=q+r2a = \dfrac{q+r}{2}:

aq=rq2,ar=qr2=rq2a - q = \frac{r-q}{2}, \qquad a - r = \frac{q-r}{2} = -\frac{r-q}{2}

gradient=Arq2(rq2)=A(rq)24\text{gradient} = A \cdot \frac{r-q}{2} \cdot \left(-\frac{r-q}{2}\right) = -\frac{A(r-q)^2}{4}

Part (ii)

By the same reasoning with the roles of pp and rr swapped, the tangent at x=cx = c passes through (r,0)(r, 0) when 2c=p+q2c = p + q, and its gradient is:

A(cp)(cq)=A(qp)24A(c-p)(c-q) = -\frac{A(q-p)^2}{4}

The two tangents are parallel if and only if their gradients are equal:

A(rq)24=A(qp)24-\frac{A(r-q)^2}{4} = -\frac{A(q-p)^2}{4}

(rq)2=(qp)2(r-q)^2 = (q-p)^2

Since p<q<rp < q < r, both rq>0r - q > 0 and qp>0q - p > 0, so taking positive square roots:

rq=qp(i.e. p+r=2q)r - q = q - p \qquad \text{(i.e.\ } p + r = 2q\text{)}

Now consider the tangent to CC at x=qx = q. The gradient is f(q)=A(qp)(qr)f'(q) = A(q-p)(q-r), so the tangent line is:

y=A(qp)(qr)(xq)y = A(q-p)(q-r)(x - q)

To find where this tangent meets CC again, set A(xp)(xq)(xr)=A(qp)(qr)(xq)A(x-p)(x-q)(x-r) = A(q-p)(q-r)(x-q).

If x=qx = q this is trivially satisfied (the point of tangency). For xqx \neq q, we may divide by A(xq)A(x-q):

(xp)(xr)=(qp)(qr)(x-p)(x-r) = (q-p)(q-r)

Expanding both sides:

x2(p+r)x+pr=q2(p+r)q+prx^2 - (p+r)x + pr = q^2 - (p+r)q + pr

x2(p+r)x=q2(p+r)qx^2 - (p+r)x = q^2 - (p+r)q

x2q2(p+r)(xq)=0x^2 - q^2 - (p+r)(x - q) = 0

(xq)[(x+q)(p+r)]=0(x-q)\bigl[(x+q) - (p+r)\bigr] = 0

(xq)(x+qpr)=0(x-q)(x + q - p - r) = 0

So x=qx = q (the tangency point) or x=p+rqx = p + r - q.

The tangent meets the curve again if and only if p+rqqp + r - q \neq q, i.e.\ p+r2qp + r \neq 2q, i.e.\ qprqq - p \neq r - q.

Equivalently, the tangent at x=qx = q does not meet the curve again if and only if p+r=2qp + r = 2q, which is exactly the condition qp=rqq - p = r - q for the two tangents to be parallel. \square

Examiner Notes

无官方评述。易错点:(1) 乘积求导时遗漏项;(2) part(ii) 中”切线不再与曲线相交”的几何含义理解不清,需联立切线与曲线方程分析重根条件;(3) 题目要求证明”if and only if”,需注意双向推导。


Topic: 微积分 (Calculus)  |  Difficulty: Challenging  |  Marks: 20

2 The function ff satisfies f(0)=0f(0) = 0 and f(t)>0f'(t) > 0 for t>0t > 0. Show by means of a sketch that, for x>0x > 0,

0xf(t)dt+0f(x)f1(y)dy=xf(x).\int_{0}^{x} f(t) \, dt + \int_{0}^{f(x)} f^{-1}(y) \, dy = xf(x).

(i) The (real) function gg is defined, for all tt, by

(g(t))3+g(t)=t.(g(t))^3 + g(t) = t.

Prove that g(0)=0g(0) = 0, and that g(t)>0g'(t) > 0 for all tt.

Evaluate 02g(t)dt\int_{0}^{2} g(t) \, dt.

(ii) The (real) function hh is defined, for all tt, by

(h(t))3+h(t)=t+2.(h(t))^3 + h(t) = t + 2.

Evaluate 08h(t)dt\int_{0}^{8} h(t) \, dt.

Hint

Sketch with areas 0xf(t)dt\int_0^x f(t) dt, 0f(x)f1(y)dy\int_0^{f(x)} f^{-1}(y) dy and rectangle correctly identified. (One mark any one) [G1 G1 (2 marks)] (i) g(0)(g(0)2+1)=0g(0)(g(0)^2 + 1) = 0 factorised g(0)g(0) real so g(0)=0g(0) = 0 (must be justified) [M1 A1 (AG)] 1=(3g(t)2+1)g(t)1 = (3g(t)^2 + 1)g'(t) (3g(t)2+1)>0(3g(t)^2 + 1) > 0 so g(t)>0g'(t) > 0 [M1 A1 (AG)] g(2)3+g(2)2=0g(2)^3 + g(2) - 2 = 0 (g(2)1)(g(2)2+g(2)+2)=0(g(2) - 1)(g(2)^2 + g(2) + 2) = 0 Δ=7<0\Delta = -7 < 0 so g(2)=1g(2) = 1 or g(2)>0g(2)>0 justified [M1 A1] g1(s)=s3+sg^{-1}(s) = s^3 + s 02g(t)dt=2g(2)0g(2)g1(s)ds\int_0^2 g(t) dt = 2g(2) - \int_0^{g(2)} g^{-1}(s) ds =54= \frac{5}{4} [B1 M1 A1 (9 marks)] (ii) h(t)=g(t+2)h(t) = g(t + 2) so h(0)=g(2)=1h(0) = g(2) = 1 and h(t)>0h'(t) > 0 [M1 A1] (h(8)2)(h(8)2+2h(8)+5)=0(h(8) - 2)(h(8)^2 + 2h(8) + 5) = 0 h(8)=2h(8) = 2 correctly justified [M1 A1] h1(s)=s3+s2h^{-1}(s) = s^3 + s - 2 08h(t)dt+h(0)h(8)h1(s)ds=16\int_0^8 h(t) dt + \int_{h(0)}^{h(8)} h^{-1}(s) ds = 16 (or similar correct equation) 08h(t)dt=1612(s3+s2)ds\int_0^8 h(t) dt = 16 - \int_1^2 (s^3 + s - 2) ds =16[s44+s222s]12= 16 - [\frac{s^4}{4} + \frac{s^2}{2} - 2s]_1^2 (integration) =1234= 12 \frac{3}{4} [B1 M1 A1 M1 A1 (9 marks)]

Model Solution

Sketch argument for the identity.

Since f(0)=0f(0) = 0 and f(t)>0f'(t) > 0 for t>0t > 0, the function ff is strictly increasing for t>0t > 0, so f1f^{-1} exists. Consider the rectangle with vertices (0,0)(0,0), (x,0)(x,0), (x,f(x))(x, f(x)), (0,f(x))(0, f(x)). This rectangle has area xf(x)x \cdot f(x).

The region under y=f(t)y = f(t) from t=0t = 0 to t=xt = x has area 0xf(t)dt\int_0^x f(t)\,dt.

The region to the left of t=f1(y)t = f^{-1}(y) from y=0y = 0 to y=f(x)y = f(x) has area 0f(x)f1(y)dy\int_0^{f(x)} f^{-1}(y)\,dy.

These two regions tile the rectangle exactly (they share only the boundary curve y=f(t)y = f(t)), so:

0xf(t)dt+0f(x)f1(y)dy=xf(x)\int_0^x f(t)\,dt + \int_0^{f(x)} f^{-1}(y)\,dy = x\,f(x) \qquad \square

Part (i)

Showing g(0)=0g(0) = 0: Setting t=0t = 0 in (g(t))3+g(t)=t(g(t))^3 + g(t) = t:

(g(0))3+g(0)=0(g(0))^3 + g(0) = 0

g(0)((g(0))2+1)=0g(0)\bigl((g(0))^2 + 1\bigr) = 0

Since (g(0))2+11>0(g(0))^2 + 1 \geq 1 > 0 for real g(0)g(0), we must have g(0)=0g(0) = 0. \square

Showing g(t)>0g'(t) > 0: Differentiating (g(t))3+g(t)=t(g(t))^3 + g(t) = t implicitly with respect to tt:

3(g(t))2g(t)+g(t)=13(g(t))^2 g'(t) + g'(t) = 1

g(t)(3(g(t))2+1)=1g'(t)\bigl(3(g(t))^2 + 1\bigr) = 1

Since 3(g(t))2+11>03(g(t))^2 + 1 \geq 1 > 0, we have g(t)=13(g(t))2+1>0g'(t) = \dfrac{1}{3(g(t))^2 + 1} > 0 for all tt. \square

Evaluating 02g(t)dt\int_0^2 g(t)\,dt: Since gg is strictly increasing (as g(t)>0g'(t) > 0) with g(0)=0g(0) = 0, we can apply the identity with f=gf = g and x=2x = 2:

02g(t)dt+0g(2)g1(s)ds=2g(2)()\int_0^2 g(t)\,dt + \int_0^{g(2)} g^{-1}(s)\,ds = 2\,g(2) \qquad (\ast)

We first find g(2)g(2). Setting t=2t = 2: (g(2))3+g(2)=2(g(2))^3 + g(2) = 2, so (g(2))3+g(2)2=0(g(2))^3 + g(2) - 2 = 0. Testing g(2)=1g(2) = 1: 1+12=01 + 1 - 2 = 0. Factoring:

(g(2)1)((g(2))2+g(2)+2)=0(g(2) - 1)\bigl((g(2))^2 + g(2) + 2\bigr) = 0

The discriminant of s2+s+2s^2 + s + 2 is 18=7<01 - 8 = -7 < 0, so there are no other real roots. Thus g(2)=1g(2) = 1.

The inverse function satisfies s=(g1(s))3+g1(s)s = (g^{-1}(s))^3 + g^{-1}(s)… equivalently, from (g(t))3+g(t)=t(g(t))^3 + g(t) = t, if s=g(t)s = g(t) then t=s3+st = s^3 + s, so g1(s)=s3+sg^{-1}(s) = s^3 + s.

Substituting into ()(\ast):

02g(t)dt+01(s3+s)ds=21=2\int_0^2 g(t)\,dt + \int_0^1 (s^3 + s)\,ds = 2 \cdot 1 = 2

01(s3+s)ds=[s44+s22]01=14+12=34\int_0^1 (s^3 + s)\,ds = \left[\frac{s^4}{4} + \frac{s^2}{2}\right]_0^1 = \frac{1}{4} + \frac{1}{2} = \frac{3}{4}

02g(t)dt=234=54\int_0^2 g(t)\,dt = 2 - \frac{3}{4} = \frac{5}{4}

Part (ii)

The function hh satisfies (h(t))3+h(t)=t+2(h(t))^3 + h(t) = t + 2, while gg satisfies (g(t))3+g(t)=t(g(t))^3 + g(t) = t.

Comparing: if we set u=t+2u = t + 2, then (g(u))3+g(u)=u=t+2(g(u))^3 + g(u) = u = t + 2, so h(t)=g(t+2)h(t) = g(t + 2).

Therefore h(0)=g(2)=1h(0) = g(2) = 1 and h(8)=g(10)h(8) = g(10).

We find h(8)=g(10)h(8) = g(10): setting s=g(10)s = g(10), we need s3+s=10s^3 + s = 10. Testing s=2s = 2: 8+2=108 + 2 = 10. Factoring:

(s2)(s2+2s+5)=0(s - 2)(s^2 + 2s + 5) = 0

The discriminant of s2+2s+5s^2 + 2s + 5 is 420=16<04 - 20 = -16 < 0, so h(8)=g(10)=2h(8) = g(10) = 2.

Since h(0)=10h(0) = 1 \neq 0, the identity does not apply directly to hh. Instead, use the substitution u=t+2u = t + 2:

08h(t)dt=08g(t+2)dt=210g(u)du\int_0^8 h(t)\,dt = \int_0^8 g(t+2)\,dt = \int_2^{10} g(u)\,du

Now apply the identity to gg (which satisfies g(0)=0g(0) = 0) at x=10x = 10 and at x=2x = 2:

010g(u)du+0g(10)g1(s)ds=10g(10)=20\int_0^{10} g(u)\,du + \int_0^{g(10)} g^{-1}(s)\,ds = 10 \cdot g(10) = 20

02g(u)du+0g(2)g1(s)ds=2g(2)=2\int_0^2 g(u)\,du + \int_0^{g(2)} g^{-1}(s)\,ds = 2 \cdot g(2) = 2

Subtracting:

210g(u)du=18g(2)g(10)g1(s)ds=1812(s3+s)ds\int_2^{10} g(u)\,du = 18 - \int_{g(2)}^{g(10)} g^{-1}(s)\,ds = 18 - \int_1^2 (s^3 + s)\,ds

12(s3+s)ds=[s44+s22]12=(4+2)(14+12)=634=214\int_1^2 (s^3 + s)\,ds = \left[\frac{s^4}{4} + \frac{s^2}{2}\right]_1^2 = (4 + 2) - \left(\frac{1}{4} + \frac{1}{2}\right) = 6 - \frac{3}{4} = \frac{21}{4}

08h(t)dt=18214=72214=514=1234\int_0^8 h(t)\,dt = 18 - \frac{21}{4} = \frac{72 - 21}{4} = \frac{51}{4} = 12\frac{3}{4}

Examiner Notes

无官方评述。易错点:(1) 面积图示法的严格性——需说明 f 单调递增确保反函数存在;(2) part(ii) 中 h(t) 与 g(t) 的关系容易忽略平移变换 h(t) = g(t-2)+? 实际上 (h(t))³+h(t)=t+2 意味着 h(t)=g(t+2) 的某种变形,需仔细处理;(3) 积分限的变换要准确。


Topic: 代数与函数 (Algebra & Functions)  |  Difficulty: Challenging  |  Marks: 20

3 For any two real numbers x1x_1 and x2x_2, show that

x1+x2x1+x2.|x_1 + x_2| \leqslant |x_1| + |x_2|.

Show further that, for any real numbers x1,x2,,xnx_1, x_2, \dots, x_n,

x1+x2++xnx1+x2++xn.|x_1 + x_2 + \dots + x_n| \leqslant |x_1| + |x_2| + \dots + |x_n|.

(i) The polynomial f is defined by

f(x)=1+a1x+a2x2++an1xn1+xnf(x) = 1 + a_1x + a_2x^2 + \dots + a_{n-1}x^{n-1} + x^n

where the coefficients are real and satisfy aiA|a_i| \leqslant A for i=1,2,,n1i = 1, 2, \dots, n-1, where A1A \geqslant 1.

(a) If x<1|x| < 1, show that

f(x)1Ax1x.|f(x) - 1| \leqslant \frac{A|x|}{1 - |x|}.

(b) Let ω\omega be a real root of f, so that f(ω)=0f(\omega) = 0. In the case ω<1|\omega| < 1, show that

11+Aω1+A.(*)\frac{1}{1 + A} \leqslant |\omega| \leqslant 1 + A. \qquad \text{(*)}

(c) Show further that the inequalities (*) also hold if ω1|\omega| \geqslant 1.

(ii) Find the integer root or roots of the quintic equation

135x5135x4100x391x2126x+135=0.135x^5 - 135x^4 - 100x^3 - 91x^2 - 126x + 135 = 0.

Hint

x1+x2|x_1 + x_2| is maximised when both have the same sign, [E1] In which case x1+x2=x1+x2|x_1 + x_2| = |x_1| + |x_2|. Thus, x1+x2x1+x2|x_1 + x_2| \le |x_1 + x_2| (or by consideration of all four combinations of signs separately) x1++xn1+xnx1++xn1+xn|x_1 + \dots + x_{n-1} + x_n| \le |x_1 + \dots + x_{n-1}| + |x_n| \le \dots x1++xn1+xn\le |x_1| + \dots + |x_{n-1}| + |x_n| by induction [E1] [(2 marks)] (i) (a) f(x)1=a1x++an1xn1+xn|f(x) - 1| = |a_1x + \dots + a_{n-1}x^{n-1} + x^n| a1x++an1xn1+xn\le |a_1x| + \dots + |a_{n-1}x^{n-1}| + |x^n| =a1x++an1xn1+xn= |a_1||x| + \dots + |a_{n-1}||x|^{n-1} + |x|^n A(x++xn1)+xn\le A(|x| + \dots + |x|^{n-1}) + |x|^n A(x++xn1+xn)\le A(|x| + \dots + |x|^{n-1} + |x|^n) (justified) =Ax(1xn)1x= A \frac{|x|(1-|x|^n)}{1-|x|} Ax1x\le A \frac{|x|}{1-|x|} (justified) [M1 M1 M1 M1 M1 A1 (AG)] (6 marks) (b) 1Aω1ω1 \le \frac{A|\omega|}{1-|\omega|} using f(ω)=0f(\omega) = 0 1(A+1)ω1 \le (A + 1)|\omega| (with sign of 1ω1 - |\omega| justified) A+11ωA + 1 \ge 1 \ge |\omega| [M1 A1 (AG) B1 (AG)] (3 marks) (c) If ω>1|\omega| > 1, 0=ωnf(1ω)0 = \omega^n f\left(\frac{1}{\omega}\right) =1+an1ω++a1ωn1+ωn= 1 + a_{n-1}\omega + \dots + a_1\omega^{n-1} + \omega^n Inequalities continue to hold since aiA|a_i| \le A If ω=1|\omega| = 1, then 1+A111+A1 + A \ge 1 \ge \frac{1}{1+A} since A>0A > 0 [M1 E1 E1] (3 marks) (ii) f(x)=x5x4100135x391135x2126135x+1f(x) = x^5 - x^4 - \frac{100}{135}x^3 - \frac{91}{135}x^2 - \frac{126}{135}x + 1 Use A=1A = 1. Integer roots with 12ω2\frac{1}{2} \le |\omega| \le 2 could only be ±1\pm 1 or ±2\pm 2 f(±2)0f(\pm 2) \ne 0 because numerator is odd (or any valid justification) f(1)=1821350f(1) = -\frac{182}{135} \ne 0 f(1)=0f(1) = 0 x=1x = 1 is the only integer root. [B1 M1 M1 E1 A1 A1] (6 marks)

Model Solution

Preliminary: Triangle Inequality

For real numbers x1,x2x_1, x_2, both sides of x1+x2x1+x2|x_1 + x_2| \leqslant |x_1| + |x_2| are non-negative, so squaring preserves the inequality. It suffices to show

(x1+x2)2(x1+x2)2(x_1 + x_2)^2 \leqslant (|x_1| + |x_2|)^2

x12+2x1x2+x22x12+2x1x2+x22x_1^2 + 2x_1 x_2 + x_2^2 \leqslant x_1^2 + 2|x_1||x_2| + x_2^2

x1x2x1x2.x_1 x_2 \leqslant |x_1||x_2|.

This holds since x1x2x1x2=x1x2x_1 x_2 \leqslant |x_1 x_2| = |x_1||x_2| for all real x1,x2x_1, x_2. Hence x1+x2x1+x2|x_1 + x_2| \leqslant |x_1| + |x_2|.

For the general case, we proceed by induction. The base case n=2n = 2 is established above. Suppose the inequality holds for n1n - 1 terms. Then

x1++xn1+xnx1++xn1+xn(x1++xn1)+xn|x_1 + \dots + x_{n-1} + x_n| \leqslant |x_1 + \dots + x_{n-1}| + |x_n| \leqslant (|x_1| + \dots + |x_{n-1}|) + |x_n|

by the two-term inequality (applied to x1++xn1x_1 + \dots + x_{n-1} and xnx_n) and the inductive hypothesis. Hence x1++xnx1++xn|x_1 + \dots + x_n| \leqslant |x_1| + \dots + |x_n| for all n2n \geqslant 2. (shown)\qquad \text{(shown)}


Part (i)(a)

We have f(x)1=a1x+a2x2++an1xn1+xnf(x) - 1 = a_1 x + a_2 x^2 + \dots + a_{n-1}x^{n-1} + x^n. Applying the triangle inequality:

f(x)1a1x+a2x2++an1xn1+xn|f(x) - 1| \leqslant |a_1||x| + |a_2||x|^2 + \dots + |a_{n-1}||x|^{n-1} + |x|^n

Since aiA|a_i| \leqslant A for each ii:

f(x)1Ax+Ax2++Axn1+xn|f(x) - 1| \leqslant A|x| + A|x|^2 + \dots + A|x|^{n-1} + |x|^n

Since A1A \geqslant 1, we have xnAxn|x|^n \leqslant A|x|^n, so

f(x)1A(x+x2++xn)=Ax(1xn)1x|f(x) - 1| \leqslant A\bigl(|x| + |x|^2 + \dots + |x|^n\bigr) = A \cdot \frac{|x|(1 - |x|^n)}{1 - |x|}

using the geometric series formula (valid for x<1|x| < 1). Since xn>0|x|^n > 0, we have 1xn<11 - |x|^n < 1, giving

f(x)1Ax(1xn)1xAx1x.(shown)|f(x) - 1| \leqslant \frac{A|x|(1 - |x|^n)}{1 - |x|} \leqslant \frac{A|x|}{1 - |x|}. \qquad \text{(shown)}


Part (i)(b)

If ω\omega is a real root with ω<1|\omega| < 1, then f(ω)=0f(\omega) = 0, so f(ω)1=1|f(\omega) - 1| = 1. By part (a):

1Aω1ω1 \leqslant \frac{A|\omega|}{1 - |\omega|}

Since ω<1|\omega| < 1, we have 1ω>01 - |\omega| > 0. Multiplying both sides by (1ω)(1 - |\omega|):

1ωAω1 - |\omega| \leqslant A|\omega|

1(1+A)ω1 \leqslant (1 + A)|\omega|

ω11+A.|\omega| \geqslant \frac{1}{1 + A}.

Also, since A1A \geqslant 1 and ω<1<1+A|\omega| < 1 < 1 + A, we have ω1+A|\omega| \leqslant 1 + A. Combining:

11+Aω1+A.(shown)\frac{1}{1 + A} \leqslant |\omega| \leqslant 1 + A. \qquad \text{(shown)}


Part (i)(c)

Case ω>1|\omega| > 1: Since f(ω)=0f(\omega) = 0, we have ωn+an1ωn1++a1ω+1=0\omega^n + a_{n-1}\omega^{n-1} + \dots + a_1 \omega + 1 = 0. Dividing by ωn\omega^n:

1+an1ω+an2ω2++a1ωn1+1ωn=01 + \frac{a_{n-1}}{\omega} + \frac{a_{n-2}}{\omega^2} + \dots + \frac{a_1}{\omega^{n-1}} + \frac{1}{\omega^n} = 0

So ω=1/ω\omega' = 1/\omega is a root of g(t)=1+an1t+an2t2++a1tn1+tng(t) = 1 + a_{n-1}t + a_{n-2}t^2 + \dots + a_1 t^{n-1} + t^n, which is a polynomial of the same form as ff with aiA|a_i| \leqslant A.

Since ω=1/ω<1|\omega'| = 1/|\omega| < 1, part (b) gives 11+Aω1+A\frac{1}{1+A} \leqslant |\omega'| \leqslant 1+A, i.e.

11+A1ω1+A.\frac{1}{1+A} \leqslant \frac{1}{|\omega|} \leqslant 1 + A.

Taking reciprocals (reversing the first inequality):

11+Aω1+A.\frac{1}{1+A} \leqslant |\omega| \leqslant 1 + A.

Case ω=1|\omega| = 1: We need 11+A11+A\frac{1}{1+A} \leqslant 1 \leqslant 1 + A. Since A1A \geqslant 1, we have 1+A2>11 + A \geqslant 2 > 1 and 11+A12<1\frac{1}{1+A} \leqslant \frac{1}{2} < 1. Both inequalities hold.

Hence the bounds ()(*) hold for all real roots ω\omega. (shown)\qquad \text{(shown)}


Part (ii)

The equation is 135x5135x4100x391x2126x+135=0135x^5 - 135x^4 - 100x^3 - 91x^2 - 126x + 135 = 0. Dividing through by 135:

x5x42027x391135x21415x+1=0x^5 - x^4 - \frac{20}{27}x^3 - \frac{91}{135}x^2 - \frac{14}{15}x + 1 = 0

This has the form 1+a1x+a2x2+a3x3+a4x4+x5=01 + a_1 x + a_2 x^2 + a_3 x^3 + a_4 x^4 + x^5 = 0 with a1=1415a_1 = -\frac{14}{15}, a2=91135a_2 = -\frac{91}{135}, a3=2027a_3 = -\frac{20}{27}, a4=1a_4 = -1.

We check ai1|a_i| \leqslant 1: 1415<1\frac{14}{15} < 1, 91135<1\frac{91}{135} < 1, 2027<1\frac{20}{27} < 1, 1=11 = 1. So A=1A = 1.

By the bounds ()(*), any root ω\omega satisfies 12ω2\frac{1}{2} \leqslant |\omega| \leqslant 2. The only integers in this range are ±1\pm 1 and ±2\pm 2.

Checking x=1x = 1:

13513510091126+135=1820.135 - 135 - 100 - 91 - 126 + 135 = -182 \neq 0.

Checking x=1x = -1:

135135+10091+126+135=0.-135 - 135 + 100 - 91 + 126 + 135 = 0.

So x=1x = -1 is a root. For completeness, we verify the remaining candidates.

Checking x=2x = 2:   135(32)135(16)100(8)91(4)126(2)+135=43202160800364252+135=7670\;135(32) - 135(16) - 100(8) - 91(4) - 126(2) + 135 = 4320 - 2160 - 800 - 364 - 252 + 135 = 767 \neq 0.

Checking x=2x = -2:   135(32)135(16)100(8)91(4)126(2)+135=43202160+800364+252+135=56570\;135(-32) - 135(16) - 100(-8) - 91(4) - 126(-2) + 135 = -4320 - 2160 + 800 - 364 + 252 + 135 = -5657 \neq 0.

The only integer root is x=1x = -1.

Examiner Notes

无官方评述。易错点:(1) part(i)(a) 中 |f(x)-1| 的估计需逐项拆分后用等比级数求和;(2) part(i)(b) 和 (c) 中 |ω|<1 与 |ω|≥1 两种情况的分界处理,特别是 (*) 中 1/(1+A)≤|ω| 的下界推导;(3) part(ii) 的整数根需先用有理根定理缩小候选范围再逐一验证。


Topic: 三角学 (Trigonometry)  |  Difficulty: Hard  |  Marks: 20

4 You are not required to consider issues of convergence in this question.

For any sequence of numbers a1,a2,,am,,ana_1, a_2, \dots, a_m, \dots, a_n, the notation i=mnai\displaystyle \prod_{i=m}^{n} a_i denotes the product amam+1ana_m a_{m+1} \cdots a_n.

(i) Use the identity 2cosxsinx=sin(2x)2 \cos x \sin x = \sin(2x) to evaluate the product cos(π9)cos(2π9)cos(4π9)\cos(\frac{\pi}{9}) \cos(\frac{2\pi}{9}) \cos(\frac{4\pi}{9}).

(ii) Simplify the expression

k=0ncos(x2k)(0<x<12π).\prod_{k=0}^{n} \cos \left( \frac{x}{2^k} \right) \qquad (0 < x < \frac{1}{2}\pi).

Using differentiation, or otherwise, show that, for 0<x<12π0 < x < \frac{1}{2}\pi,

k=0n12ktan(x2k)=12ncot(x2n)2cot(2x).\sum_{k=0}^{n} \frac{1}{2^k} \tan \left( \frac{x}{2^k} \right) = \frac{1}{2^n} \cot \left( \frac{x}{2^n} \right) - 2 \cot(2x).

(iii) Using the results limθ0sinθθ=1\displaystyle \lim_{\theta \to 0} \frac{\sin \theta}{\theta} = 1 and limθ0tanθθ=1\displaystyle \lim_{\theta \to 0} \frac{\tan \theta}{\theta} = 1, show that

k=1cos(x2k)=sinxx\prod_{k=1}^{\infty} \cos \left( \frac{x}{2^k} \right) = \frac{\sin x}{x}

and evaluate

j=212j2tan(π2j).\sum_{j=2}^{\infty} \frac{1}{2^{j-2}} \tan \left( \frac{\pi}{2^j} \right).

Hint

(i) sinπ9cosπ9cos2π9cos4π9\sin \frac{\pi}{9} \cos \frac{\pi}{9} \cos \frac{2\pi}{9} \cos \frac{4\pi}{9} [B1] =12sin2π9cos2π9cos4π9= \frac{1}{2} \sin \frac{2\pi}{9} \cos \frac{2\pi}{9} \cos \frac{4\pi}{9} [M1] =18sin8π9= \frac{1}{8} \sin \frac{8\pi}{9} =18sinπ9= \frac{1}{8} \sin \frac{\pi}{9} (use of sin(πx)=sin(x)\sin(\pi - x) = \sin(x)) [M1] cosπ9cos2π9cos4π9=18\cos \frac{\pi}{9} \cos \frac{2\pi}{9} \cos \frac{4\pi}{9} = \frac{1}{8} [A1] (4 marks) (ii) sin(x2n)k=0ncos(x2k)\sin \left( \frac{x}{2^n} \right) \prod_{k=0}^{n} \cos \left( \frac{x}{2^k} \right) [B1] =12sin(x2n1)k=0n1cos(x2k)= \frac{1}{2} \sin \left( \frac{x}{2^{n-1}} \right) \prod_{k=0}^{n-1} \cos \left( \frac{x}{2^k} \right) [M1] == \dots (convincing use of induction or repeated application) [E1] =sin(2x)2n+1= \frac{\sin(2x)}{2^{n+1}} (induction end point correct) k=0ncos(x2k)=sin(2x)2n+1sin(x2n)\prod_{k=0}^{n} \cos \left( \frac{x}{2^k} \right) = \frac{\sin(2x)}{2^{n+1} \sin \left( \frac{x}{2^n} \right)} [A1] k=0nlog(cos(x2k))=log(sin(2x))log(sin(x2n))log(2n+1)\sum_{k=0}^{n} \log \left( \cos \left( \frac{x}{2^k} \right) \right) = \log(\sin(2x)) - \log \left( \sin \left( \frac{x}{2^n} \right) \right) - \log(2^{n+1}) [M1 (diff)] k=0n12ktan(x2k)=2cot(2x)+12ncot(x2n)\sum_{k=0}^{n} \frac{1}{2^k} \tan \left( \frac{x}{2^k} \right) = -2 \cot(2x) + \frac{1}{2^n} \cot \left( \frac{x}{2^n} \right) [M1 (division)] (justified with differentiation) [A1 (AG)] (7 marks) (iii) B1 – switch to product starting at 0 M1 – set up as limiting case of product to n M1 – apply small angle for sin A1 – correct answer k=1ncos(x2k)=sin(2x)2n+1sin(x2n)cos(x)\prod_{k=1}^{n} \cos \left( \frac{x}{2^k} \right) = \frac{\sin(2x)}{2^{n+1} \sin \left( \frac{x}{2^n} \right) \cos(x)} [M1] =2sin(x)2n+1sin(x2n)= \frac{2 \sin(x)}{2^{n+1} \sin \left( \frac{x}{2^n} \right)} [M1] sin(x)2n×(x2n)\sim \frac{\sin(x)}{2^n \times \left( \frac{x}{2^n} \right)} [M1] =sin(x)x= \frac{\sin(x)}{x} [A1 (AG)]

Model Solution

Part (i)

We use the double-angle identity 2cosθsinθ=sin(2θ)2\cos\theta\sin\theta = \sin(2\theta) repeatedly. The key trick is to multiply the product by sin(π/9)\sin(\pi/9):

sinπ9cosπ9cos2π9cos4π9\sin\frac{\pi}{9} \cdot \cos\frac{\pi}{9} \cdot \cos\frac{2\pi}{9} \cdot \cos\frac{4\pi}{9}

Applying 2cosθsinθ=sin(2θ)2\cos\theta\sin\theta = \sin(2\theta) with θ=π/9\theta = \pi/9:

=12sin2π9cos2π9cos4π9= \frac{1}{2}\sin\frac{2\pi}{9} \cdot \cos\frac{2\pi}{9} \cdot \cos\frac{4\pi}{9}

Applying the identity again with θ=2π/9\theta = 2\pi/9:

=14sin4π9cos4π9= \frac{1}{4}\sin\frac{4\pi}{9} \cdot \cos\frac{4\pi}{9}

Applying the identity once more with θ=4π/9\theta = 4\pi/9:

=18sin8π9= \frac{1}{8}\sin\frac{8\pi}{9}

Since sin(πx)=sinx\sin(\pi - x) = \sin x, we have sin8π9=sinπ9\sin\frac{8\pi}{9} = \sin\frac{\pi}{9}. Therefore:

sinπ9cosπ9cos2π9cos4π9=18sinπ9\sin\frac{\pi}{9} \cdot \cos\frac{\pi}{9} \cdot \cos\frac{2\pi}{9} \cdot \cos\frac{4\pi}{9} = \frac{1}{8}\sin\frac{\pi}{9}

Dividing both sides by sin(π/9)0\sin(\pi/9) \neq 0:

cosπ9cos2π9cos4π9=18\cos\frac{\pi}{9} \cdot \cos\frac{2\pi}{9} \cdot \cos\frac{4\pi}{9} = \frac{1}{8}


Part (ii) — Simplification

We claim that

k=0ncosx2k=sin(2x)2n+1sin ⁣(x2n).(*)\prod_{k=0}^{n} \cos\frac{x}{2^k} = \frac{\sin(2x)}{2^{n+1}\sin\!\left(\dfrac{x}{2^n}\right)}. \qquad \text{(*)}

Proof by induction. For n=0n = 0: the left side is cosx\cos x and the right side is sin(2x)2sinx=2sinxcosx2sinx=cosx\frac{\sin(2x)}{2\sin x} = \frac{2\sin x\cos x}{2\sin x} = \cos x. So the base case holds.

Suppose the formula holds for n1n - 1. Then

k=0ncosx2k=cosx2nk=0n1cosx2k=cosx2nsin(2x)2nsin ⁣(x2n1)\prod_{k=0}^{n} \cos\frac{x}{2^k} = \cos\frac{x}{2^n} \cdot \prod_{k=0}^{n-1} \cos\frac{x}{2^k} = \cos\frac{x}{2^n} \cdot \frac{\sin(2x)}{2^n \sin\!\left(\dfrac{x}{2^{n-1}}\right)}

by the inductive hypothesis. Using 2sinx2n1cosx2n=sinx2n12cosx2n2\sin\frac{x}{2^{n-1}}\cos\frac{x}{2^n} = \sin\frac{x}{2^{n-1}} \cdot 2\cos\frac{x}{2^n}… let us instead write 2cosx2nsinx2n=sinx2n12\cos\frac{x}{2^n}\sin\frac{x}{2^n} = \sin\frac{x}{2^{n-1}}, so cosx2n=sinx2n12sinx2n\cos\frac{x}{2^n} = \frac{\sin\frac{x}{2^{n-1}}}{2\sin\frac{x}{2^n}}. Substituting:

=sinx2n12sinx2nsin(2x)2nsinx2n1=sin(2x)2n+1sinx2n.= \frac{\sin\frac{x}{2^{n-1}}}{2\sin\frac{x}{2^n}} \cdot \frac{\sin(2x)}{2^n \sin\frac{x}{2^{n-1}}} = \frac{\sin(2x)}{2^{n+1}\sin\frac{x}{2^n}}.

This completes the induction. (shown)\qquad \text{(shown)}


Part (ii) — Tan sum formula

Taking logarithms of both sides of ()(*):

k=0nln ⁣(cosx2k)=ln(sin2x)ln ⁣(sinx2n)(n+1)ln2\sum_{k=0}^{n} \ln\!\left(\cos\frac{x}{2^k}\right) = \ln(\sin 2x) - \ln\!\left(\sin\frac{x}{2^n}\right) - (n+1)\ln 2

Differentiating both sides with respect to xx:

k=0n12ksinx2kcosx2k=2cos2xsin2x12ncosx2nsinx2n\sum_{k=0}^{n} \frac{1}{2^k} \cdot \frac{-\sin\frac{x}{2^k}}{\cos\frac{x}{2^k}} = \frac{2\cos 2x}{\sin 2x} - \frac{1}{2^n} \cdot \frac{\cos\frac{x}{2^n}}{\sin\frac{x}{2^n}}

k=0n12ktanx2k=2cot2x12ncotx2n-\sum_{k=0}^{n} \frac{1}{2^k}\tan\frac{x}{2^k} = 2\cot 2x - \frac{1}{2^n}\cot\frac{x}{2^n}

Multiplying both sides by 1-1:

k=0n12ktanx2k=12ncotx2n2cot2x.(shown)\sum_{k=0}^{n} \frac{1}{2^k}\tan\frac{x}{2^k} = \frac{1}{2^n}\cot\frac{x}{2^n} - 2\cot 2x. \qquad \text{(shown)}


Part (iii) — Infinite product

From part (ii), the product k=0ncosx2k\prod_{k=0}^{n} \cos\frac{x}{2^k} includes the k=0k = 0 factor cosx\cos x. So

k=1ncosx2k=k=0ncosx2kcosx=sin2x2n+1sinx2ncosx.\prod_{k=1}^{n} \cos\frac{x}{2^k} = \frac{\prod_{k=0}^{n} \cos\frac{x}{2^k}}{\cos x} = \frac{\sin 2x}{2^{n+1}\sin\frac{x}{2^n}\cos x}.

Using sin2x=2sinxcosx\sin 2x = 2\sin x\cos x:

k=1ncosx2k=2sinxcosx2n+1sinx2ncosx=sinx2nsinx2n.\prod_{k=1}^{n} \cos\frac{x}{2^k} = \frac{2\sin x\cos x}{2^{n+1}\sin\frac{x}{2^n}\cos x} = \frac{\sin x}{2^n \sin\frac{x}{2^n}}.

As nn \to \infty, x/2n0x/2^n \to 0, so sinx2nx2n\sin\frac{x}{2^n} \sim \frac{x}{2^n} (using limθ0sinθθ=1\lim_{\theta\to 0}\frac{\sin\theta}{\theta} = 1). Therefore

limnk=1ncosx2k=limnsinx2nx2n=sinxx.\lim_{n\to\infty} \prod_{k=1}^{n} \cos\frac{x}{2^k} = \lim_{n\to\infty} \frac{\sin x}{2^n \cdot \frac{x}{2^n}} = \frac{\sin x}{x}.

k=1cosx2k=sinxx.(shown)\prod_{k=1}^{\infty} \cos\frac{x}{2^k} = \frac{\sin x}{x}. \qquad \text{(shown)}


Part (iii) — Evaluating the sum

We evaluate S=j=212j2tanπ2j\displaystyle S = \sum_{j=2}^{\infty} \frac{1}{2^{j-2}} \tan\frac{\pi}{2^j}.

Setting k=j2k = j - 2 (so j=k+2j = k + 2), the sum becomes

S=k=012ktanπ2k+2=k=012ktanπ42kS = \sum_{k=0}^{\infty} \frac{1}{2^k} \tan\frac{\pi}{2^{k+2}} = \sum_{k=0}^{\infty} \frac{1}{2^k} \tan\frac{\pi}{4 \cdot 2^k}

This matches the formula from part (ii) with x=π/4x = \pi/4. Taking the limit nn \to \infty:

S=limn(12ncotπ/42n2cotπ2)S = \lim_{n\to\infty}\left(\frac{1}{2^n}\cot\frac{\pi/4}{2^n} - 2\cot\frac{\pi}{2}\right)

Since cot(π/2)=0\cot(\pi/2) = 0, the second term vanishes. For the first term, let θ=π/42n0\theta = \frac{\pi/4}{2^n} \to 0:

12ncotθ=cosθ2nsinθ=cosθ2nθθsinθ11=cosθπ/4θsinθ\frac{1}{2^n}\cot\theta = \frac{\cos\theta}{2^n \sin\theta} = \frac{\cos\theta}{2^n \theta} \cdot \frac{\theta}{\sin\theta} \cdot \frac{1}{1} = \frac{\cos\theta}{\pi/4} \cdot \frac{\theta}{\sin\theta}

since 2nθ=π/42^n\theta = \pi/4. As θ0\theta \to 0: cosθ1\cos\theta \to 1 and θsinθ1\frac{\theta}{\sin\theta} \to 1 (using limθ0sinθθ=1\lim_{\theta\to 0}\frac{\sin\theta}{\theta} = 1). Therefore

limn12ncotπ/42n=1π/4=4π\lim_{n\to\infty} \frac{1}{2^n}\cot\frac{\pi/4}{2^n} = \frac{1}{\pi/4} = \frac{4}{\pi}

S=4πS = \frac{4}{\pi}

Examiner Notes

无官方评述。易错点:(1) part(i) 的技巧——乘以 sin(π/9) 构造连锁消去——不易想到;(2) part(ii) 中对乘积取对数后求导得到 tan 求和公式,需注意乘积与求和的对应关系;(3) part(iii) 取极限时需用 lim(sinθ/θ)=1 的条件,且求和公式的指标变换(j 从 2 开始)容易出错。


Topic: 数列与级数 (Sequences & Series)  |  Difficulty: Challenging  |  Marks: 20

5 The sequence u0,u1,u_0, u_1, \dots is said to be a constant sequence if un=un+1u_n = u_{n+1} for n=0,1,2,n = 0, 1, 2, \dots. The sequence is said to be a sequence of period 2 if un=un+2u_n = u_{n+2} for n=0,1,2,n = 0, 1, 2, \dots and the sequence is not constant.

(i) A sequence of real numbers is defined by u0=au_0 = a and un+1=f(un)u_{n+1} = f(u_n) for n=0,1,2,n = 0, 1, 2, \dots, where

f(x)=p+(xp)x,f(x) = p + (x - p)x,

and pp is a given real number.

Find the values of aa for which the sequence is constant.

Show that the sequence has period 2 for some value of aa if and only if p>3p > 3 or p<1p < -1.

(ii) A sequence of real numbers is defined by u0=au_0 = a and un+1=f(un)u_{n+1} = f(u_n) for n=0,1,2,n = 0, 1, 2, \dots, where

f(x)=q+(xp)x,f(x) = q + (x - p)x,

and pp and qq are given real numbers.

Show that there is no value of aa for which the sequence is constant if and only if f(x)>xf(x) > x for all xx.

Deduce that, if there is no value of aa for which the sequence is constant, then there is no value of aa for which the sequence has period 2.

Is it true that, if there is no value of aa for which the sequence has period 2, then there is no value of aa for which the sequence is constant?

Hint

(i) Constant iff a=f(a)a = f(a) [M1] a=p+(ap)a\Leftrightarrow a = p + (a - p)a 0=(ap)(a1)\Leftrightarrow 0 = (a - p)(a - 1) [M1] a=p\Leftrightarrow a = p or a=1a = 1. [A1] Period 2 a=f(f(a))\Leftrightarrow a = f(f(a)) [M1] 0=(ap)(1+2appa2+a3)\Leftrightarrow 0 = (a - p)(-1 + 2ap - pa^2 + a^3) (factorisation) [M1] 0=(ap)(a1)(a2+(1p)a+1)\Leftrightarrow 0 = (a - p)(a - 1)(a^2 + (1 - p)a + 1) [A1] If a=pa = p or a=1a = 1, then sequence is constant. [B1] The quadratic has solutions when (p1)24(p - 1)^2 \ge 4. [M1] If (p1)2>4(p - 1)^2 > 4, i.e. p>3p > 3 or p<1p < -1, the solutions are distinct. They are not both 1,p1, p since the sum of the roots is p1p+1p - 1 \ne p + 1 [E1] So for p>3p > 3 or p<1p < -1, one of the roots of the quadratic gives a sequence of period 2. [E1 (AG)] If p=3,a=1p = 3, a = 1 so not period 2. [B1] If p=1,a=1=pp = -1, a = -1 = p so not period 2. [B1] (12 marks) (ii) No value of aa for which the sequence is constant f(a)=a\Leftrightarrow f(a) = a has no solution [E1 (\rightarrow)] f(x)>x\Leftrightarrow f(x) > x or f(x)<xf(x) < x for all xx [E1 (\leftarrow)] But f(x)>xf(x) > x for large xx. So cannot have f(x)<xf(x) < x for all xx. [E1] If no value of aa for which sequence constant, then f(x)>xf(x) > x for all xx [E1] So f(f(x))>f(x)>xf(f(x)) > f(x) > x for all xx [E1] And hence no solution to f(f(a))=af(f(a)) = a. [E1] Setting p=qp = q, gives (i). [E1] Then if 1p3-1 \le p \le 3, there is no period 2 sequence but a constant sequence exists. [E1] (8 marks)

Model Solution

Part (i): Constant Sequences

The sequence is constant if and only if a=f(a)a = f(a), i.e.

a=p+(ap)a=p+a2paa = p + (a - p)a = p + a^2 - pa

0=a2(p+1)a+p=(ap)(a1)0 = a^2 - (p + 1)a + p = (a - p)(a - 1)

So the sequence is constant if and only if a=pa = p or a=1a = 1. (shown)\qquad \text{(shown)}

Part (i): Period 2

The sequence has period 2 if and only if a=f(f(a))a = f(f(a)) but af(a)a \neq f(a) (i.e. the sequence is not constant).

First, compute f(f(a))f(f(a)). Let b=f(a)=a2pa+pb = f(a) = a^2 - pa + p. Then

f(b)=b2pb+p=(a2pa+p)2p(a2pa+p)+pf(b) = b^2 - pb + p = (a^2 - pa + p)^2 - p(a^2 - pa + p) + p

Setting f(f(a))=af(f(a)) = a and rearranging:

f(f(a))a=0f(f(a)) - a = 0

Since a=pa = p and a=1a = 1 are solutions of f(a)=af(a) = a (hence also of f(f(a))=af(f(a)) = a), we can factor out (ap)(a1)(a - p)(a - 1). Working through the algebra:

f(f(a))a=(ap)(a1)(a2+(1p)a+1)f(f(a)) - a = (a - p)(a - 1)\bigl(a^2 + (1 - p)a + 1\bigr)

So f(f(a))=af(f(a)) = a if and only if a=pa = p, a=1a = 1, or aa is a root of a2+(1p)a+1=0a^2 + (1 - p)a + 1 = 0.

If a=pa = p or a=1a = 1, the sequence is constant, not period 2. For a genuine period-2 sequence, we need a root of the quadratic that is distinct from both pp and 11.

The quadratic a2+(1p)a+1=0a^2 + (1 - p)a + 1 = 0 has real roots if and only if its discriminant is non-negative:

(1p)240(p1)24(1 - p)^2 - 4 \geqslant 0 \qquad \Longleftrightarrow \qquad (p - 1)^2 \geqslant 4

This gives p12|p - 1| \geqslant 2, i.e. p3p \geqslant 3 or p1p \leqslant -1.

Checking p=3p = 3: The quadratic becomes a22a+1=(a1)2=0a^2 - 2a + 1 = (a - 1)^2 = 0, so a=1a = 1, which gives a constant sequence. No period-2 sequence.

Checking p=1p = -1: The quadratic becomes a2+2a+1=(a+1)2=0a^2 + 2a + 1 = (a + 1)^2 = 0, so a=1=pa = -1 = p, which gives a constant sequence. No period-2 sequence.

For p>3p > 3 or p<1p < -1: The quadratic has two distinct real roots. We verify neither root equals pp or 11:

  • If a=pa = p were a root: p2+(1p)p+1=p2+pp2+1=p+1=0p^2 + (1 - p)p + 1 = p^2 + p - p^2 + 1 = p + 1 = 0, so p=1p = -1. But we are in the case p<1p < -1 or p>3p > 3, so p1p \neq -1. (At p=1p = -1, the root a=1=pa = -1 = p gives a constant sequence, as checked above.)

  • If a=1a = 1 were a root: 1+(1p)+1=3p=01 + (1 - p) + 1 = 3 - p = 0, so p=3p = 3. But we are in the case p<1p < -1 or p>3p > 3, so p3p \neq 3. (At p=3p = 3, the root a=1a = 1 gives a constant sequence, as checked above.)

Therefore, for p>3p > 3 or p<1p < -1, the quadratic has two distinct real roots, neither equal to pp or 11. Either root gives a starting value aa for which the sequence has period 2.

The sequence has period 2 for some value of aa if and only if p>3p > 3 or p<1p < -1. (shown)\qquad \text{(shown)}


Part (ii): No Constant Sequence iff f(x)>xf(x) > x for all xx

We have f(x)=q+x2pxf(x) = q + x^2 - px, so f(x)x=x2(p+1)x+qf(x) - x = x^2 - (p + 1)x + q. This is a quadratic in xx with positive leading coefficient.

()(\Rightarrow) Suppose there is no value of aa for which the sequence is constant. Then f(a)=af(a) = a has no real solution, so x2(p+1)x+q=0x^2 - (p+1)x + q = 0 has no real roots. Since the leading coefficient is positive, the quadratic is strictly positive for all xx:

f(x)x=x2(p+1)x+q>0for all xf(x) - x = x^2 - (p+1)x + q > 0 \qquad \text{for all } x

i.e. f(x)>xf(x) > x for all xx.

()(\Leftarrow) Suppose f(x)>xf(x) > x for all xx. Then for any aa, f(a)>af(a) > a, so f(a)af(a) \neq a. Hence there is no constant sequence.

Therefore, there is no value of aa for which the sequence is constant if and only if f(x)>xf(x) > x for all xx. (shown)\qquad \text{(shown)}

Deduction: No Period-2 Sequence

Suppose there is no value of aa for which the sequence is constant. By the result above, f(x)>xf(x) > x for all xx. In particular, for any xx:

f(f(x))>f(x)>xf(f(x)) > f(x) > x

So f(f(x))>xf(f(x)) > x for all xx, which means f(f(a))=af(f(a)) = a has no solution. Hence there is no value of aa for which the sequence has period 2. (shown)\qquad \text{(shown)}

Final Question: Converse

Is it true that if there is no period-2 sequence, then there is no constant sequence?

No. Take p=q=0p = q = 0, so f(x)=x2f(x) = x^2. Then f(x)=xf(x) = x gives x2x=0x^2 - x = 0, so x=0x = 0 and x=1x = 1 are both constant sequences.

For period 2: f(f(x))=xf(f(x)) = x gives x4=xx^4 = x, i.e. x(x31)=0x(x^3 - 1) = 0. The real solutions are x=0x = 0 and x=1x = 1, both of which give f(x)=xf(x) = x (constant sequences). There is no period-2 sequence.

So we have a case with no period-2 sequence but constant sequences do exist. (shown)\qquad \text{(shown)}

Examiner Notes

无官方评述。易错点:(1) “常数序列”和”周期2序列”的定义需严格区分——周期2要求非常数;(2) part(i) 中周期2的条件 f(f(x))=x 且 f(x)≠x 的分析需仔细因式分解;(3) part(ii) 最后一问是反问句,答案为”否”,需构造反例。


Topic: 微分方程 (Differential Equations)  |  Difficulty: Challenging  |  Marks: 20

6 Note: You may assume that if the functions y1(x)y_1(x) and y2(x)y_2(x) both satisfy one of the differential equations in this question, then the curves y=y1(x)y = y_1(x) and y=y2(x)y = y_2(x) do not intersect.

(i) Find the solution of the differential equation

dydx=y+x+1\frac{dy}{dx} = y + x + 1

that has the form y=mx+cy = mx + c, where mm and cc are constants.

Let y3(x)y_3(x) be the solution of this differential equation with y3(0)=ky_3(0) = k. Show that any stationary point on the curve y=y3(x)y = y_3(x) lies on the line y=x1y = -x - 1. Deduce that solution curves with k<2k < -2 cannot have any stationary points.

Show further that any stationary point on the solution curve is a local minimum.

Use the substitution Y=y+xY = y + x to solve the differential equation, and sketch, on the same axes, the solutions with k=0k = 0, k=2k = -2 and k=3k = -3.

(ii) Find the two solutions of the differential equation

dydx=x2+y22xy4x+4y+3\frac{dy}{dx} = x^2 + y^2 - 2xy - 4x + 4y + 3

that have the form y=mx+cy = mx + c.

Let y4(x)y_4(x) be the solution of this differential equation with y4(0)=2y_4(0) = -2. (Do not attempt to find this solution.)

Show that any stationary point on the curve y=y4(x)y = y_4(x) lies on one of two lines that you should identify. What can be said about the gradient of the curve at points between these lines?

Sketch the curve y=y4(x)y = y_4(x). You should include on your sketch the two straight line solutions and the two lines of stationary points.

Hint

(i) If y=mx+cy = mx + c, Then the differential equation becomes m=mx+c+x+1m = mx + c + x + 1 [M1] m=1,c=2m = -1, c = -2 y=x2y = -x - 2 [A1] dydx=0y+x+1=0y=x1\frac{dy}{dx} = 0 \Rightarrow y + x + 1 = 0 \Rightarrow y = -x - 1 [E1 (AG)] y=y3(x)y = y_3(x) cannot cross the line y=x2y = -x - 2. So if y3(0)<2y_3(0) < -2, it cannot reach the line y=x1y = -x - 1 and hence has no stationary points. [E1] At a stationary point, d2ydx2=dydx+1=y+x+2=1>0\frac{d^2y}{dx^2} = \frac{dy}{dx} + 1 = y + x + 2 = 1 > 0 so minimum [E1] dYdx=Y+2\frac{dY}{dx} = Y + 2 [M1] log(Y+2)=x+c\log(Y + 2) = x + c [M1] Y=2+AexY = -2 + Ae^x y=x2+Aexy = -x - 2 + Ae^x [A1] y(0)=0A=2y(0) = 0 \Rightarrow A = 2 y(0)=3A=1y(0) = -3 \Rightarrow A = -1 (attempt at both) [M1] So y=x2+2exy = -x - 2 + 2e^x So y=x2exy = -x - 2 - e^x (both) Curves tending to asymptote to the left [G1] Curve above line through origin tending to \infty [G1] Curve below line tending to -\infty [G1] [(12 marks)] (ii) If y=mx+cy = mx + c, Then the differential equation becomes m=(mx+c)2+4(mx+c)+x24x2x(mx+c)+3m = (mx + c)^2 + 4(mx + c) + x^2 - 4x - 2x(mx + c) + 3 0=(m22x+1)x2+(2mc+4m42c)+c2+4c+3m0 = (m^2 - 2x + 1)x^2 + (2mc + 4m - 4 - 2c) + c^2 + 4c + 3 - m From x2x^2: m=1m = 1 From xx: 2mc+4m42c=2c+442c=02mc + 4m - 4 - 2c = 2c + 4 - 4 - 2c = 0

Model Solution

Part (i): Linear Solution

Try y=mx+cy = mx + c. Then dydx=m\frac{dy}{dx} = m, and the equation m=(mx+c)+x+1m = (mx + c) + x + 1 must hold for all xx. Comparing coefficients:

  • Coefficient of xx: 0=m+10 = m + 1, so m=1m = -1.
  • Constant: m=c+1m = c + 1, so c=m1=2c = m - 1 = -2.

The linear solution is y=x2y = -x - 2. (shown)\qquad \text{(shown)}

Part (i): Stationary Points on y=x1y = -x - 1

At a stationary point, dydx=0\frac{dy}{dx} = 0, so y+x+1=0y + x + 1 = 0, i.e.

y=x1.(shown)y = -x - 1. \qquad \text{(shown)}

Part (i): No Stationary Points for k<2k < -2

The linear solution y=x2y = -x - 2 is itself a solution curve. By the given assumption, solution curves do not intersect. So any other solution curve lies entirely above or entirely below y=x2y = -x - 2.

If k=y3(0)<2k = y_3(0) < -2, then at x=0x = 0 the curve y=y3(x)y = y_3(x) lies below the line y=x2y = -x - 2. Since the curves do not intersect, y3(x)<x2y_3(x) < -x - 2 for all xx. But stationary points require y=x1y = -x - 1, and

x2<y3(x)<x2is impossible wheny3(x)=x1-x - 2 < y_3(x) < -x - 2 \quad \text{is impossible when} \quad y_3(x) = -x - 1

since x1>x2-x - 1 > -x - 2. More precisely: y3(x)<x2<x1y_3(x) < -x - 2 < -x - 1 for all xx, so y3(x)x1y_3(x) \neq -x - 1 for any xx. Hence the curve has no stationary points. (shown)\qquad \text{(shown)}

Part (i): Stationary Points are Local Minima

At a stationary point, dydx=0\frac{dy}{dx} = 0, so y+x+1=0y + x + 1 = 0. Differentiating the ODE:

d2ydx2=dydx+1=0+1=1>0\frac{d^2 y}{dx^2} = \frac{dy}{dx} + 1 = 0 + 1 = 1 > 0

So every stationary point is a local minimum. (shown)\qquad \text{(shown)}

Part (i): Solving via Substitution Y=y+xY = y + x

Let Y=y+xY = y + x, so y=Yxy = Y - x and dydx=dYdx1\frac{dy}{dx} = \frac{dY}{dx} - 1. Substituting:

dYdx1=(Yx)+x+1=Y+1\frac{dY}{dx} - 1 = (Y - x) + x + 1 = Y + 1

dYdx=Y+2\frac{dY}{dx} = Y + 2

This is a separable ODE:

dYY+2=dx\int \frac{dY}{Y + 2} = \int dx

lnY+2=x+C\ln|Y + 2| = x + C

Y+2=Aex(A0)Y + 2 = Ae^x \qquad (A \neq 0)

y+x+2=Aexy + x + 2 = Ae^x

y=x2+Aexy = -x - 2 + Ae^x

With y(0)=ky(0) = k: k=02+Ak = 0 - 2 + A, so A=k+2A = k + 2.

y3(x)=x2+(k+2)exy_3(x) = -x - 2 + (k + 2)e^x

Sketch for k=0k = 0, k=2k = -2, k=3k = -3:

All three curves share the asymptote y=x2y = -x - 2 (the linear solution) as xx \to -\infty, since ex0e^x \to 0.

  • k=0k = 0: y=x2+2exy = -x - 2 + 2e^x. At x=0x = 0: y=2y = -2. For large positive xx, the exponential dominates and y+y \to +\infty. Stationary point at 2ex=12e^x = 1, i.e. x=ln2x = -\ln 2, with y=ln22+ln2=2ln22y = \ln 2 - 2 + \ln 2 = 2\ln 2 - 2. This is a local minimum. The curve lies above the asymptote.

  • k=2k = -2: y=x2y = -x - 2. This is the straight line solution itself. No stationary points (since x2x1-x - 2 \neq -x - 1).

  • k=3k = -3: y=x2exy = -x - 2 - e^x. At x=0x = 0: y=3y = -3. For large positive xx, yy \to -\infty. The curve lies below the asymptote. Since k<2k < -2, there are no stationary points (as shown above). dydx=1ex<0\frac{dy}{dx} = -1 - e^x < 0 for all xx, so the curve is strictly decreasing.


Part (ii): Straight-Line Solutions

First, factor the right-hand side. Let u=xyu = x - y:

x2+y22xy4x+4y+3=(xy)24(xy)+3=(u1)(u3)x^2 + y^2 - 2xy - 4x + 4y + 3 = (x - y)^2 - 4(x - y) + 3 = (u - 1)(u - 3)

So the ODE is dydx=(xy1)(xy3)\frac{dy}{dx} = (x - y - 1)(x - y - 3).

Try y=x+cy = x + c (i.e. m=1m = 1). Then dydx=1\frac{dy}{dx} = 1 and xy=cx - y = -c, so:

1=(c1)(c3)=(c+1)(c+3)=c2+4c+31 = (-c - 1)(-c - 3) = (c + 1)(c + 3) = c^2 + 4c + 3

c2+4c+2=0c^2 + 4c + 2 = 0

c=4±1682=2±2c = \frac{-4 \pm \sqrt{16 - 8}}{2} = -2 \pm \sqrt{2}

The two straight-line solutions are

y=x2+2andy=x22y = x - 2 + \sqrt{2} \qquad \text{and} \qquad y = x - 2 - \sqrt{2}

Verification: For y=x+cy = x + c with xy=cx - y = -c:

(xy1)(xy3)=(c1)(c3)=c2+4c+3=(c2+4c+2)+1=1=dydx(x-y-1)(x-y-3) = (-c-1)(-c-3) = c^2 + 4c + 3 = (c^2 + 4c + 2) + 1 = 1 = \frac{dy}{dx} \quad \checkmark


Part (ii): Stationary Points

Stationary points occur when dydx=0\frac{dy}{dx} = 0:

(xy1)(xy3)=0(x - y - 1)(x - y - 3) = 0

xy=1orxy=3x - y = 1 \quad \text{or} \quad x - y = 3

i.e. on the lines y=x1y = x - 1 and y=x3y = x - 3.

Gradient between the lines: When 1<xy<31 < x - y < 3:

  • (xy1)>0(x - y - 1) > 0 and (xy3)<0(x - y - 3) < 0
  • So dydx=(xy1)(xy3)<0\frac{dy}{dx} = (x-y-1)(x-y-3) < 0

The gradient is strictly negative between the two lines.

Gradient outside the lines:

  • If xy<1x - y < 1: both factors are negative, so dydx>0\frac{dy}{dx} > 0.
  • If xy>3x - y > 3: both factors are positive, so dydx>0\frac{dy}{dx} > 0.

Behaviour of y4y_4: At x=0x = 0, y4(0)=2y_4(0) = -2, so xy=2x - y = 2, which lies between the two lines (1<2<31 < 2 < 3). The gradient there is (21)(23)=1<0(2 - 1)(2 - 3) = -1 < 0.

Since solution curves do not cross, and the gradient is positive outside the strip while zero on the boundaries, the curve y=y4(x)y = y_4(x) is trapped in the region 1<xy<31 < x - y < 3 for all xx. Within this region, dydx<0\frac{dy}{dx} < 0 always, so the curve is strictly decreasing and has no stationary points.

As xx \to -\infty: xyx - y decreases toward 1, so the curve approaches y=x1y = x - 1 from below (the gradient tends to 0).

As x+x \to +\infty: xyx - y increases toward 3, so the curve approaches y=x3y = x - 3 from above (the gradient tends to 0).

The curve passes through (0,2)(0, -2) with gradient 1-1, decreasing from the neighbourhood of y=x1y = x - 1 (upper left) toward y=x3y = x - 3 (lower right).

Sketch: The sketch should show:

  1. The two straight-line solutions y=x2+2y = x - 2 + \sqrt{2} and y=x22y = x - 2 - \sqrt{2} (slope 1, parallel to each other, outside the strip).
  2. The two lines of stationary points y=x1y = x - 1 and y=x3y = x - 3 (slope 1, also parallel, bounding the strip).
  3. The curve y=y4(x)y = y_4(x) trapped between y=x1y = x - 1 and y=x3y = x - 3, passing through (0,2)(0, -2), approaching y=x1y = x - 1 as xx \to -\infty and y=x3y = x - 3 as x+x \to +\infty, always decreasing.

The ordering from top to bottom is: y=x2+2y = x - 2 + \sqrt{2}, then y=x1y = x - 1, then y=x3y = x - 3, then y=x22y = x - 2 - \sqrt{2}.

Examiner Notes

无官方评述。易错点:(1) part(i) 中 k<-2 时无驻点的证明需结合驻点在 y=-x-1 上且该直线与解曲线不相交的条件;(2) part(ii) 中 dy/dx 可因式分解为 (x-y-1)(x-y-3),识别此结构是关键;(3) 定性画图时需标注直线解和驻点轨迹线。


Topic: 几何与向量 (Geometry & Vectors)  |  Difficulty: Challenging  |  Marks: 20

7 (i) The points AA, BB and CC have position vectors a, b and c, respectively. Each of these vectors is a unit vector (so aa=1\mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{a} = 1, for example) and

a+b+c=0.\mathbf{a} + \mathbf{b} + \mathbf{c} = \mathbf{0}.

Show that ab=12\mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{b} = -\frac{1}{2}. What can be said about the triangle ABCABC? You should justify your answer.

(ii) The four distinct points AiA_i (i=1,2,3,4i = 1, 2, 3, 4) have unit position vectors ai\mathbf{a}_i and

i=14ai=0.\sum_{i=1}^{4} \mathbf{a}_i = \mathbf{0}.

Show that a1a2=a3a4\mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_2 = \mathbf{a}_3 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4.

(a) Given that the four points lie in a plane, determine the shape of the quadrilateral with vertices A1,A2,A3A_1, A_2, A_3 and A4A_4.

(b) Given instead that the four points are the vertices of a regular tetrahedron, find the length of the sides of this tetrahedron.

Hint

(i) a(a+b+c)=0\boldsymbol{a} \cdot (\boldsymbol{a} + \boldsymbol{b} + \boldsymbol{c}) = 0 [M1] ab+ac=1\boldsymbol{a} \cdot \boldsymbol{b} + \boldsymbol{a} \cdot \boldsymbol{c} = -1 and cyclic permutations [M1] ab=12\boldsymbol{a} \cdot \boldsymbol{b} = -\frac{1}{2} legitimately obtained [A1] cosθ=12\cos \theta = -\frac{1}{2} where θ\theta is the angle between a\boldsymbol{a} and b\boldsymbol{b} [M1] θ=120\theta = 120^{\circ} [A1] Similarly, the angle between a\boldsymbol{a} and b\boldsymbol{b} is 120120^{\circ}. [M1] Justification of equilateral triangle by sketch or otherwise [M1] ABC is equilateral [A1] (8 marks) (ii) a1a2+a1a3+a1a4=1\boldsymbol{a}_1 \cdot \boldsymbol{a}_2 + \boldsymbol{a}_1 \cdot \boldsymbol{a}_3 + \boldsymbol{a}_1 \cdot \boldsymbol{a}_4 = -1 and cyclic permutations [M1] Linear combination of these equations [M1] a1a2=a3a4\boldsymbol{a}_1 \cdot \boldsymbol{a}_2 = \boldsymbol{a}_3 \cdot \boldsymbol{a}_4 (legitimately obtained) [A1 (AG)] (3 marks) (a) [Angles A1OA2=A3OA4\angle A_1OA_2 = \angle A_3OA_4] By symmetry, A2OA3=A4OA1\angle A_2OA_3 = \angle A_4OA_1 The ai\boldsymbol{a}_i are distinct and unit length so no angles are zero (accept justification by sketch) [M1] A1A2A3A4A_1A_2A_3A_4 is a rectangle [A1] (3 marks) (b) [(A1A2)2=(a1a2)2(A_1A_2)^2 = (\boldsymbol{a}_1 - \boldsymbol{a}_2)^2] =a12+a222a1a2= \boldsymbol{a}_1^2 + \boldsymbol{a}_2^2 - 2\boldsymbol{a}_1 \cdot \boldsymbol{a}_2 [M1] =22a1a2= 2 - 2\boldsymbol{a}_1 \cdot \boldsymbol{a}_2 [M1] By symmetry, a1a2=a1a3=a1a4\boldsymbol{a}_1 \cdot \boldsymbol{a}_2 = \boldsymbol{a}_1 \cdot \boldsymbol{a}_3 = \boldsymbol{a}_1 \cdot \boldsymbol{a}_4 [M1] So a1a2=13\boldsymbol{a}_1 \cdot \boldsymbol{a}_2 = -\frac{1}{3} [A1] So (A1A2)2=83(A_1A_2)^2 = \frac{8}{3} [M1] A1A2=223A_1A_2 = \frac{2\sqrt{2}}{\sqrt{3}} [A1] (6 marks)

Model Solution

Part (i)

Since a+b+c=0\mathbf{a} + \mathbf{b} + \mathbf{c} = \mathbf{0}, we take the dot product of both sides with a\mathbf{a}:

a(a+b+c)=a0=0\mathbf{a} \cdot (\mathbf{a} + \mathbf{b} + \mathbf{c}) = \mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{0} = 0

aa+ab+ac=0\mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{a} + \mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{b} + \mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{c} = 0

Since a\mathbf{a} is a unit vector, aa=1\mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{a} = 1, so:

1+ab+ac=0(... 1)1 + \mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{b} + \mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{c} = 0 \qquad \text{(... 1)}

Similarly, taking the dot product with b\mathbf{b}:

ab+1+bc=0(... 2)\mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{b} + 1 + \mathbf{b} \cdot \mathbf{c} = 0 \qquad \text{(... 2)}

And with c\mathbf{c}:

ac+bc+1=0(... 3)\mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{c} + \mathbf{b} \cdot \mathbf{c} + 1 = 0 \qquad \text{(... 3)}

Adding equations (1), (2), and (3):

2(ab+ac+bc)+3=02(\mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{b} + \mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{c} + \mathbf{b} \cdot \mathbf{c}) + 3 = 0

ab+ac+bc=32(... 4)\mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{b} + \mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{c} + \mathbf{b} \cdot \mathbf{c} = -\frac{3}{2} \qquad \text{(... 4)}

Subtracting equation (1) from equation (4):

bc=32(1)=12\mathbf{b} \cdot \mathbf{c} = -\frac{3}{2} - (-1) = -\frac{1}{2}

By symmetry of equations (1), (2), (3) (each has the same structure), all pairwise dot products are equal:

ab=ac=bc=12\mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{b} = \mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{c} = \mathbf{b} \cdot \mathbf{c} = -\frac{1}{2}

Therefore ab=12\mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{b} = -\dfrac{1}{2}.

The side length AB|AB| is:

AB2=ba2=(ba)(ba)=bb2ab+aa=12(12)+1=3|AB|^2 = |\mathbf{b} - \mathbf{a}|^2 = (\mathbf{b} - \mathbf{a}) \cdot (\mathbf{b} - \mathbf{a}) = \mathbf{b} \cdot \mathbf{b} - 2\mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{b} + \mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{a} = 1 - 2\left(-\frac{1}{2}\right) + 1 = 3

So AB=3|AB| = \sqrt{3}. By identical calculations:

BC2=12(12)+1=3BC=3|BC|^2 = 1 - 2\left(-\frac{1}{2}\right) + 1 = 3 \qquad \Rightarrow \quad |BC| = \sqrt{3}

CA2=12(12)+1=3CA=3|CA|^2 = 1 - 2\left(-\frac{1}{2}\right) + 1 = 3 \qquad \Rightarrow \quad |CA| = \sqrt{3}

Since AB=BC=CA=3|AB| = |BC| = |CA| = \sqrt{3}, triangle ABCABC is equilateral.

Alternatively, cos(AOB)=ab=12\cos(\angle AOB) = \mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{b} = -\frac{1}{2} gives AOB=120\angle AOB = 120^\circ. Similarly BOC=COA=120\angle BOC = \angle COA = 120^\circ. The three points are equally spaced at equal distance from the origin, confirming the triangle is equilateral.


Part (ii)

From a1+a2+a3+a4=0\mathbf{a}_1 + \mathbf{a}_2 + \mathbf{a}_3 + \mathbf{a}_4 = \mathbf{0}, we take the dot product with each ai\mathbf{a}_i:

1+a1a2+a1a3+a1a4=0(... 1)1 + \mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_2 + \mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_3 + \mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4 = 0 \qquad \text{(... 1)}

a2a1+1+a2a3+a2a4=0(... 2)\mathbf{a}_2 \cdot \mathbf{a}_1 + 1 + \mathbf{a}_2 \cdot \mathbf{a}_3 + \mathbf{a}_2 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4 = 0 \qquad \text{(... 2)}

a3a1+a3a2+1+a3a4=0(... 3)\mathbf{a}_3 \cdot \mathbf{a}_1 + \mathbf{a}_3 \cdot \mathbf{a}_2 + 1 + \mathbf{a}_3 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4 = 0 \qquad \text{(... 3)}

a4a1+a4a2+a4a3+1=0(... 4)\mathbf{a}_4 \cdot \mathbf{a}_1 + \mathbf{a}_4 \cdot \mathbf{a}_2 + \mathbf{a}_4 \cdot \mathbf{a}_3 + 1 = 0 \qquad \text{(... 4)}

Adding (1) and (3):

2+a1a2+2(a1a3)+a1a4+a2a3+a3a4=0(... 5)2 + \mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_2 + 2(\mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_3) + \mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4 + \mathbf{a}_2 \cdot \mathbf{a}_3 + \mathbf{a}_3 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4 = 0 \qquad \text{(... 5)}

Adding (2) and (4):

2+a1a2+2(a2a4)+a1a4+a2a3+a3a4=0(... 6)2 + \mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_2 + 2(\mathbf{a}_2 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4) + \mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4 + \mathbf{a}_2 \cdot \mathbf{a}_3 + \mathbf{a}_3 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4 = 0 \qquad \text{(... 6)}

Subtracting (6) from (5):

2(a1a3)2(a2a4)=02(\mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_3) - 2(\mathbf{a}_2 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4) = 0

a1a3=a2a4(... 7)\mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_3 = \mathbf{a}_2 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4 \qquad \text{(... 7)}

Subtracting (2) from (1):

(a1a3a2a4)+(a1a4a2a3)=0(\mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_3 - \mathbf{a}_2 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4) + (\mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4 - \mathbf{a}_2 \cdot \mathbf{a}_3) = 0

Using (7), we get a1a4=a2a3(... 8)\mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4 = \mathbf{a}_2 \cdot \mathbf{a}_3 \qquad \text{(... 8)}.

From (1): a1a2+(a1a3)+(a1a4)=1\mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_2 + (\mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_3) + (\mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4) = -1

From (3): (a1a3)+(a2a3)+a3a4=1(\mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_3) + (\mathbf{a}_2 \cdot \mathbf{a}_3) + \mathbf{a}_3 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4 = -1

Using (8) to replace a2a3\mathbf{a}_2 \cdot \mathbf{a}_3 with a1a4\mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4 in the second equation:

(a1a3)+(a1a4)+a3a4=1(\mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_3) + (\mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4) + \mathbf{a}_3 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4 = -1

Comparing with the first equation, we see that a1a2\mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_2 and a3a4\mathbf{a}_3 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4 satisfy the same equation, so:

a1a2=a3a4(shown)\mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_2 = \mathbf{a}_3 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4 \qquad \text{(shown)}


(a) Suppose the four points lie in a plane. From the result above and equation (8), let:

a1a2=a3a4=p,a2a3=a1a4=q\mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_2 = \mathbf{a}_3 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4 = p, \qquad \mathbf{a}_2 \cdot \mathbf{a}_3 = \mathbf{a}_1 \cdot \mathbf{a}_4 = q

The side lengths of quadrilateral A1A2A3A4A_1A_2A_3A_4:

A1A22=a2a12=22p,A3A42=a4a32=22p|A_1A_2|^2 = |\mathbf{a}_2 - \mathbf{a}_1|^2 = 2 - 2p, \qquad |A_3A_4|^2 = |\mathbf{a}_4 - \mathbf{a}_3|^2 = 2 - 2p

A2A32=a3a22=22q,A4A12=a1a42=22q|A_2A_3|^2 = |\mathbf{a}_3 - \mathbf{a}_2|^2 = 2 - 2q, \qquad |A_4A_1|^2 = |\mathbf{a}_1 - \mathbf{a}_4|^2 = 2 - 2q

So opposite sides are equal: A1A2=A3A4|A_1A_2| = |A_3A_4| and A2A3=A4A1|A_2A_3| = |A_4A_1|.

Since the four points are coplanar with the origin as centroid (their position vectors sum to zero), we can set s=a1+a3\mathbf{s} = \mathbf{a}_1 + \mathbf{a}_3, so a2+a4=s\mathbf{a}_2 + \mathbf{a}_4 = -\mathbf{s}. For four points on the unit circle in a plane with centroid at the origin, the configuration forces a3=a1\mathbf{a}_3 = -\mathbf{a}_1 and a4=a2\mathbf{a}_4 = -\mathbf{a}_2 (opposite vertices are antipodal). This means the diagonals A1A3A_1A_3 and A2A4A_2A_4 both pass through the origin and have length 2 (each is a diameter of the unit circle).

A quadrilateral whose diagonals bisect each other is a parallelogram. Since the diagonals are equal (both of length 2), the parallelogram is a rectangle.

(b) If the four points are vertices of a regular tetrahedron, by symmetry every pair of distinct vertices has the same dot product: aiaj=α\mathbf{a}_i \cdot \mathbf{a}_j = \alpha for all iji \neq j. There are (42)=6\binom{4}{2} = 6 such pairs. Adding equations (1) through (4):

4+26α=0α=134 + 2 \cdot 6\alpha = 0 \qquad \Rightarrow \qquad \alpha = -\frac{1}{3}

The side length satisfies:

AiAj2=ajai2=12(13)+1=83|A_iA_j|^2 = |\mathbf{a}_j - \mathbf{a}_i|^2 = 1 - 2\left(-\frac{1}{3}\right) + 1 = \frac{8}{3}

AiAj=83=223=263|A_iA_j| = \sqrt{\frac{8}{3}} = \frac{2\sqrt{2}}{\sqrt{3}} = \frac{2\sqrt{6}}{3}

Examiner Notes

无官方评述。易错点:(1) part(i) 中 a·b=-1/2 后需进一步说明 |a-b|=√3 从而三角形等边;(2) part(ii)(a) 中平行四面体的证明需利用 a₁·a₂=a₃·a₄ 和共面条件;(3) part(ii)(b) 中正四面体边长 √(8/3) 的计算需注意 a₁·a₂=-1/3。


Topic: 矩阵与线性代数 (Matrices & Linear Algebra)  |  Difficulty: Hard  |  Marks: 20

8 The domain of the function ff is the set of all 2×22 \times 2 matrices and its range is the set of real numbers. Thus, if M\mathbf{M} is a 2×22 \times 2 matrix, then f(M)Rf(\mathbf{M}) \in \mathbb{R}.

The function ff has the property that f(MN)=f(M)f(N)f(\mathbf{MN}) = f(\mathbf{M})f(\mathbf{N}) for any 2×22 \times 2 matrices M\mathbf{M} and N\mathbf{N}.

(i) You are given that there is a matrix M\mathbf{M} such that f(M)0f(\mathbf{M}) \neq 0. Let I\mathbf{I} be the 2×22 \times 2 identity matrix. By considering f(MI)f(\mathbf{MI}), show that f(I)=1f(\mathbf{I}) = 1.

(ii) Let J=(0110)\mathbf{J} = \begin{pmatrix} 0 & 1 \\ 1 & 0 \end{pmatrix}. You are given that f(J)1f(\mathbf{J}) \neq 1. By considering J2\mathbf{J}^2, evaluate f(J)f(\mathbf{J}).

Using J\mathbf{J}, show that, for any real numbers a,b,ca, b, c and dd,

f((abcd))=f((cdab))=f((dcba)).f\left(\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ c & d \end{pmatrix}\right) = -f\left(\begin{pmatrix} c & d \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right) = f\left(\begin{pmatrix} d & c \\ b & a \end{pmatrix}\right).

(iii) Let K=(100k)\mathbf{K} = \begin{pmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & k \end{pmatrix} where kRk \in \mathbb{R}. Use K\mathbf{K} to show that, if the second row of the matrix A\mathbf{A} is a multiple of the first row, then f(A)=0f(\mathbf{A}) = 0.

(iv) Let P=(1101)\mathbf{P} = \begin{pmatrix} 1 & 1 \\ 0 & 1 \end{pmatrix}. By considering the matrices P2\mathbf{P}^2, P1\mathbf{P}^{-1}, and K1PK\mathbf{K}^{-1}\mathbf{PK} for suitable values of kk, evaluate f(P)f(\mathbf{P}).

Hint

(i) f(M)=f(MI)=f(M)f(I)f(\mathbf{M}) = f(\mathbf{MI}) = f(\mathbf{M})f(\mathbf{I}) [M1] f(I)=1\Rightarrow f(\mathbf{I}) = 1 since f(M)0f(\mathbf{M}) \neq 0 [A1 (AG)] (2 marks) (ii) f(J)2=f(J2)f(\mathbf{J})^2 = f(\mathbf{J}^2) [M1] =f(I)=1= f(\mathbf{I}) = 1 [M1] f(J)=1\Rightarrow f(\mathbf{J}) = -1 since f(J)1f(\mathbf{J}) \neq 1 [A1] f((cdab))=f((0110)(abcd))f\left(\begin{pmatrix} c & d \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right) = f\left(\begin{pmatrix} 0 & 1 \\ 1 & 0 \end{pmatrix} \begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ c & d \end{pmatrix}\right) [M1] =f((abcd))= -f\left(\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ c & d \end{pmatrix}\right) legitimately obtained [A1 (AG)] f((dcba))=f((cdab)(0110))f\left(\begin{pmatrix} d & c \\ b & a \end{pmatrix}\right) = f\left(\begin{pmatrix} c & d \\ a & b \end{pmatrix} \begin{pmatrix} 0 & 1 \\ 1 & 0 \end{pmatrix}\right) [M1] =f((cdab))= -f\left(\begin{pmatrix} c & d \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right) legitimately obtained [A1 (AG)] (7 marks) (iii) Using first equality in previous part (or otherwise correctly justified) f((abab))=f((abab))f\left(\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right) = -f\left(\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right) [M1] f((abab))=0f\left(\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right) = 0 [M1] f((abkakb))=f(K(abab))f\left(\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ ka & kb \end{pmatrix}\right) = f\left(\mathbf{K} \begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right) [M1] =0= 0 [A1 (AG)] (4 marks) (iv) K1PK=(1k01)\mathbf{K}^{-1}\mathbf{PK} = \begin{pmatrix} 1 & k \\ 0 & 1 \end{pmatrix} [B1] f(K)f(K1)=f(I)=1f(K1)=f(K)1f(\mathbf{K})f(\mathbf{K}^{-1}) = f(\mathbf{I}) = 1 \Rightarrow f(\mathbf{K}^{-1}) = f(\mathbf{K})^{-1} [M1] f(K1PK)=f(K1)f(PK)f(\mathbf{K}^{-1}\mathbf{PK}) = f(\mathbf{K}^{-1})f(\mathbf{PK}) (must use two stages) [M1] =f(K1)f(P)f(K)= f(\mathbf{K}^{-1})f(\mathbf{P})f(\mathbf{K}) =f(P)= f(\mathbf{P}) [A1 (AG)?] P2=(1201)\mathbf{P}^2 = \begin{pmatrix} 1 & 2 \\ 0 & 1 \end{pmatrix} [B1] f(P2)=f(P)f(P)=0f(\mathbf{P}^2) = f(\mathbf{P}) \Rightarrow f(\mathbf{P}) = 0 or 11 [M1] P1\mathbf{P}^{-1} exists so f(P)f(P1)=1f(P)0f(\mathbf{P})f(\mathbf{P}^{-1}) = 1 \Rightarrow f(\mathbf{P}) \neq 0 [A1] (7 marks)

Model Solution

Part (i)

Since there exists a matrix M\mathbf{M} with f(M)0f(\mathbf{M}) \neq 0, we use the multiplicative property with N=I\mathbf{N} = \mathbf{I}:

f(M)=f(MI)=f(M)f(I)f(\mathbf{M}) = f(\mathbf{MI}) = f(\mathbf{M})f(\mathbf{I})

Since f(M)0f(\mathbf{M}) \neq 0, we can divide both sides by f(M)f(\mathbf{M}):

f(I)=1(shown)f(\mathbf{I}) = 1 \qquad \text{(shown)}


Part (ii)

We first evaluate f(J)f(\mathbf{J}). Note that J2=(0110)(0110)=(1001)=I\mathbf{J}^2 = \begin{pmatrix} 0 & 1 \\ 1 & 0 \end{pmatrix}\begin{pmatrix} 0 & 1 \\ 1 & 0 \end{pmatrix} = \begin{pmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & 1 \end{pmatrix} = \mathbf{I}.

Using the multiplicative property:

f(J2)=f(J)f(J)=f(J)2f(\mathbf{J}^2) = f(\mathbf{J})f(\mathbf{J}) = f(\mathbf{J})^2

But also f(J2)=f(I)=1f(\mathbf{J}^2) = f(\mathbf{I}) = 1. So f(J)2=1f(\mathbf{J})^2 = 1, giving f(J)=1f(\mathbf{J}) = 1 or f(J)=1f(\mathbf{J}) = -1. Since f(J)1f(\mathbf{J}) \neq 1, we have:

f(J)=1f(\mathbf{J}) = -1

Now we show the row-swap identities. For any matrix (abcd)\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ c & d \end{pmatrix}:

J(abcd)=(0110)(abcd)=(cdab)\mathbf{J}\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ c & d \end{pmatrix} = \begin{pmatrix} 0 & 1 \\ 1 & 0 \end{pmatrix}\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ c & d \end{pmatrix} = \begin{pmatrix} c & d \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}

Therefore:

f((cdab))=f(J(abcd))=f(J)f((abcd))=f((abcd))f\left(\begin{pmatrix} c & d \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right) = f\left(\mathbf{J}\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ c & d \end{pmatrix}\right) = f(\mathbf{J}) \cdot f\left(\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ c & d \end{pmatrix}\right) = -f\left(\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ c & d \end{pmatrix}\right)

This gives the first equality: f((abcd))=f((cdab))f\left(\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ c & d \end{pmatrix}\right) = -f\left(\begin{pmatrix} c & d \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right).

For the second equality, we multiply on the right by J\mathbf{J}:

(cdab)J=(cdab)(0110)=(dcba)\begin{pmatrix} c & d \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\mathbf{J} = \begin{pmatrix} c & d \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\begin{pmatrix} 0 & 1 \\ 1 & 0 \end{pmatrix} = \begin{pmatrix} d & c \\ b & a \end{pmatrix}

Therefore:

f((dcba))=f((cdab)J)=f((cdab))f(J)=f((cdab))f\left(\begin{pmatrix} d & c \\ b & a \end{pmatrix}\right) = f\left(\begin{pmatrix} c & d \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\mathbf{J}\right) = f\left(\begin{pmatrix} c & d \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right) \cdot f(\mathbf{J}) = -f\left(\begin{pmatrix} c & d \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right)

Combining: f((cdab))=f((dcba))-f\left(\begin{pmatrix} c & d \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right) = f\left(\begin{pmatrix} d & c \\ b & a \end{pmatrix}\right), so:

f((abcd))=f((cdab))=f((dcba))(shown)f\left(\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ c & d \end{pmatrix}\right) = -f\left(\begin{pmatrix} c & d \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right) = f\left(\begin{pmatrix} d & c \\ b & a \end{pmatrix}\right) \qquad \text{(shown)}


Part (iii)

Suppose the second row of A\mathbf{A} is kk times the first row, so A=(abkakb)\mathbf{A} = \begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ ka & kb \end{pmatrix}. We can write this as:

A=(100k)(abab)=K(abab)\mathbf{A} = \begin{pmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & k \end{pmatrix}\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ a & b \end{pmatrix} = \mathbf{K}\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}

We first show that f((abab))=0f\left(\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right) = 0. From part (ii), we have:

f((abab))=f((abab))f\left(\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right) = -f\left(\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right)

(since swapping the two identical rows of (abab)\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ a & b \end{pmatrix} gives the same matrix). Therefore:

2f((abab))=0f((abab))=02f\left(\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right) = 0 \qquad \Rightarrow \qquad f\left(\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right) = 0

Now, by the multiplicative property:

f(A)=f(K(abab))=f(K)f((abab))=f(K)0=0f(\mathbf{A}) = f\left(\mathbf{K}\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right) = f(\mathbf{K}) \cdot f\left(\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ a & b \end{pmatrix}\right) = f(\mathbf{K}) \cdot 0 = 0

Therefore f(A)=0f(\mathbf{A}) = 0. (shown)\qquad \text{(shown)}


Part (iv)

We evaluate f(P)f(\mathbf{P}) where P=(1101)\mathbf{P} = \begin{pmatrix} 1 & 1 \\ 0 & 1 \end{pmatrix}.

Step 1: Conjugation by K\mathbf{K}. Let K=(100k)\mathbf{K} = \begin{pmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & k \end{pmatrix} with k0k \neq 0. Then K1=(1001/k)\mathbf{K}^{-1} = \begin{pmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & 1/k \end{pmatrix} and:

K1PK=(1001/k)(1101)(100k)=(1001/k)(1k01)=(1k01)\mathbf{K}^{-1}\mathbf{P}\mathbf{K} = \begin{pmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & 1/k \end{pmatrix}\begin{pmatrix} 1 & 1 \\ 0 & 1 \end{pmatrix}\begin{pmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & k \end{pmatrix} = \begin{pmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & 1/k \end{pmatrix}\begin{pmatrix} 1 & k \\ 0 & 1 \end{pmatrix} = \begin{pmatrix} 1 & k \\ 0 & 1 \end{pmatrix}

We show f(K1PK)=f(P)f(\mathbf{K}^{-1}\mathbf{P}\mathbf{K}) = f(\mathbf{P}). Using the multiplicative property in two stages:

f(K1PK)=f(K1)f(PK)=f(K1)f(P)f(K)f(\mathbf{K}^{-1}\mathbf{P}\mathbf{K}) = f(\mathbf{K}^{-1}) \cdot f(\mathbf{P}\mathbf{K}) = f(\mathbf{K}^{-1}) \cdot f(\mathbf{P}) \cdot f(\mathbf{K})

Since KK1=I\mathbf{K}\mathbf{K}^{-1} = \mathbf{I}: f(K)f(K1)=f(I)=1f(\mathbf{K})f(\mathbf{K}^{-1}) = f(\mathbf{I}) = 1, so f(K1)=f(K)1f(\mathbf{K}^{-1}) = f(\mathbf{K})^{-1}. Therefore:

f(K1PK)=f(K)1f(P)f(K)=f(P)f(\mathbf{K}^{-1}\mathbf{P}\mathbf{K}) = f(\mathbf{K})^{-1} \cdot f(\mathbf{P}) \cdot f(\mathbf{K}) = f(\mathbf{P})

This means f((1k01))=f(P)f\left(\begin{pmatrix} 1 & k \\ 0 & 1 \end{pmatrix}\right) = f(\mathbf{P}) for all k0k \neq 0. (It also holds for k=0k = 0 since (1001)=I\begin{pmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & 1 \end{pmatrix} = \mathbf{I} and f(I)=1f(\mathbf{I}) = 1; we verify this is consistent below.)

Step 2: Using P2\mathbf{P}^2. Setting k=2k = 2:

K1PK=(1201)=P2\mathbf{K}^{-1}\mathbf{P}\mathbf{K} = \begin{pmatrix} 1 & 2 \\ 0 & 1 \end{pmatrix} = \mathbf{P}^2

So f(P2)=f(P)f(\mathbf{P}^2) = f(\mathbf{P}). But f(P2)=f(P)2f(\mathbf{P}^2) = f(\mathbf{P})^2 by the multiplicative property. Therefore:

f(P)2=f(P)f(\mathbf{P})^2 = f(\mathbf{P})

f(P)(f(P)1)=0f(\mathbf{P})\bigl(f(\mathbf{P}) - 1\bigr) = 0

So f(P)=0f(\mathbf{P}) = 0 or f(P)=1f(\mathbf{P}) = 1.

Step 3: Eliminating f(P)=0f(\mathbf{P}) = 0. Since P\mathbf{P} is invertible (detP=10\det \mathbf{P} = 1 \neq 0), we have P1=(1101)\mathbf{P}^{-1} = \begin{pmatrix} 1 & -1 \\ 0 & 1 \end{pmatrix}, and:

f(P)f(P1)=f(PP1)=f(I)=1f(\mathbf{P})f(\mathbf{P}^{-1}) = f(\mathbf{P}\mathbf{P}^{-1}) = f(\mathbf{I}) = 1

This requires f(P)0f(\mathbf{P}) \neq 0. Therefore:

f(P)=1(shown)f(\mathbf{P}) = 1 \qquad \text{(shown)}

Examiner Notes

无官方评述。易错点:(1) part(ii) 中 J²=I 推出 f(J)²=1 再由 f(J)≠1 得 f(J)=-1,此步推理需严谨;(2) part(iii) 中利用 K=diag(1,k) 让 k→0 证明行成比例时 f=0 的技巧不易想到;(3) part(iv) 中需综合使用 P²、P⁻¹ 和 K⁻¹PK 的性质来锁定 f(P)=1。