Reverse Rearrangement Inequality

Finally posted the paper on AoPS here!

It is on a new inequality I discovered while writing a Proofathon problem a while back.

Enjoy, and please give feedback!

#Algebra #Proofathon #Inequality #Original #ReverseRearrangement

Note by Daniel Liu
6 years, 6 months ago

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Comments

That you're amazing might be sort of an understatement!

Satvik Golechha - 6 years, 6 months ago

This is a very interesting read. I especially like the examples which you have chosen to illustrate the technique, as they are otherwise non-trivial. The lemma used in your proof is reminiscent to that of the Rearrangement Inequality.

Can you add it to the Reverse Rearrangement Inequality Wiki page?

P.S. I think it could have a much better name. What you need to do, is find a bunch of "hard" inequalities of which this approach simplifies it, and someday we can call it Daniel's Lemma. I've definitely seen this approach used in several olympiad problems. The 2 variable case is often overlooked by simply expanding terms and canceling, while the 3 variable case starts to show it's usefulness.

Calvin Lin Staff - 6 years, 6 months ago

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That's where I would need to have some sort of spark of ingenuity. Currently, most of the inequalities in the problems section can be solved using Holder's Inequality (the symmetric ones usually) and I heard that some of the others can be solved using clever applications of AM-GM. But then, most problems can be solved with AM-GM used in some way or the other, so I'm not sure if that qualifies as my problems being bad.

Currently, I'm thinking of doing something based on the corollaries, which seem to give the problem maker relative freedom, as we just need to plug in any arbitrary increasing/decreasing function in some domain (which will be specified in the problem) in order to create a problem. However, in most cases the application is pretty obvious. I'm not sure if it is also obvious using other inequalities though. I also want to use the "any permutation" condition to my advantage, as not every inequality allows that.

As an example of an inequality trivial by Reverse Rearrangement: cyc((y+1)2+(x+y)(xy))((x+1)(y+1)(z+1))2\prod_{cyc}\big((y+1)^2+(x+y)(x-y)\big)\ge \big((x+1)(y+1)(z+1)\big)^2

Daniel Liu - 6 years, 6 months ago

I created the Wiki page. I also went along and created the Holder's Inequality page too (for basic holders)

Daniel Liu - 6 years, 6 months ago

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Thanks. If you add more examples to it, I can add it to the featured Wiki list. I will try and add a section on motivation / explanation too.

Calvin Lin Staff - 6 years, 6 months ago

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@Calvin Lin Well, now there are three examples. Sorry, I was too lazy to make up new problems, so I just took problems from my paper.

Daniel Liu - 6 years, 5 months ago

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@Daniel Liu Thanks. I've made some further edits to it, can you take a look and do a sanity check?

Comment:

Observe that the base case of n=1,2n=1, 2 are trivially true for similarly ordered sequences, and we do not require the condition of non-negativity.

I believe the condition on non-negative sequences, can be relaxed to having a3+b3 a_3 + b_3 be positive (where a1,b1 a_1, b_1 are the smallest terms in their sequence). I tried tracking down where non-negative sequence was used in the proof, and the only place that I see it is in the induction hypothesis where we have to multiply by (ak+1+bk+1) (a_{k+1} + b_{k+1} ) . We apply it when k=2k = 2 , hence we just require a3+b3 a_3 + b_3 to be positive, which makes ai+bi a_ i + b_i positive for i3 i \geq 3 .

If this were true, it could lead to very interesting results! We could have a1,a2,a3,b1,b2a_1, a_2, a_3, b_1, b_2 as negative values. Thoughts?

Calvin Lin Staff - 6 years, 5 months ago

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@Calvin Lin That's interesting... I was too lazy myself to check where it stopped working when some of the terms were negative. If what you said is true, wouldn't it mean we could have that the entire sequence b1,b2,bnb_1,b_2,\ldots b_n can be negative, as long as akbka_k\ge b_k for all k=1nk=1\to n?

I'll ask Cody Johnson do a quick check of this on Mathematica to see if what you said is actually true.

Daniel Liu - 6 years, 5 months ago

wow man that was really great. :o kudos!! God..you guys are geniuses.. what am I even doing here among y'all :/ anyways....again..brilliant job :D

Aritra Jana - 6 years, 6 months ago

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Don't worry, you will get there with persistence and ardor. As for the document, it is very intriguing indeed. Daniel, you have certainly cracked upon a new discovery that will be talked about for a while. I will spread the word immediately to my school and to my friends.

tytan le nguyen - 6 years, 6 months ago

Fascinating read. Outstanding job, Daniel!

Ryan Tamburrino - 6 years, 6 months ago

Where is the inequality?

Sualeh Asif - 6 years, 6 months ago

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Click on the link above, then download the PDF. Now look right under section 2.

Daniel Liu - 6 years, 6 months ago

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The link redirects me to AoPS. However I still could not find the pdf link on the page.@Daniel Liu . Could you please help me

Sualeh Asif - 6 years, 6 months ago

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@Sualeh Asif If you're on mobile, then it doesn't show up. You must be on a computer for the attachment to show up.

As for the inequality, I also posed it on Brilliant Wiki, you can find it here.

Daniel Liu - 6 years, 6 months ago

Hi Daniel, Can you remember what you were thinking when you discovered the inequality? In other words, What was going through your mind when you created something new?

A Former Brilliant Member - 6 years, 6 months ago

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I was creating an Algebra problem. I created the problem, then proceeded to solve it. However, I ended up having to prove that (m+n)(2m+2n)(km+kn)(m+σ(1)n)(2m+σ(2)n)(km+σ(k)n)(m+n)(2m+2n)\cdots (km+kn)\le (m+\sigma(1)n)(2m+\sigma(2)n)\cdots (km+\sigma(k)n) where σ(1),σ(k)\sigma(1),\ldots \sigma(k) is a permutation of 1,k1,\ldots k.

I couldn't prove it, so I just gave up on the problem.

A month later, I came back, wondering if I could make a more generalized version of that inequality. It looked so much like the Rearrangement Inequality, it just had to be true. So I created the inequality as it is now, and then managed to prove it.

Daniel Liu - 6 years, 6 months ago

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For this particular inequality, you can make use of

(1+ai)[1+aik]k(1) \prod ( 1 + a_i ) \geq [ 1 + \sqrt[k]{ \prod{a_i} } ] ^k \quad - (1)

Substitute in ai=σ(i)i×nm a_i = \frac{ \sigma(i) } { i } \times \frac{ n}{m} , clear out denominators and the result follows.

Note: The simplest approach that I know to prove inequality (1) is to take logarithms and apply Jensens to f(x)=ln(1+x) f(x) = \ln (1 + x ) .

Calvin Lin Staff - 6 years, 6 months ago

Have you considered presenting it to the AMS journal?

A Former Brilliant Member - 6 years, 6 months ago

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@A Former Brilliant Member I tried submitting it to AwesomeMath journal, but they declined because they weren't looking for inequality articles at the time. And now I already made it public, so I think it's too late already. These types of topics I doubt the AMS journal cares about, since it is purely competition-math style.

Daniel Liu - 6 years, 6 months ago

Amazing. There you are creating (i.e-discovering) new concepts, here I am struggling to understand even the basic ones :/ (My status)

Krishna Ar - 6 years, 6 months ago

Your status says they didn't accept your submission. Can you tell what was wrong?

Kartik Sharma - 6 years, 6 months ago

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I'm wondering too. I sent an email asking why right now and am waiting for their reply.

EDIT: Dr. Andreescu said that they were not interested in articles about inequalities to publish right now. Bad timing, I guess.

Daniel Liu - 6 years, 6 months ago

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@Daniel Liu how did you wrote in pdf ( can you explain me , i too want to create a pdf) , i know how to write in latex , can it be converted into pdf?

sandeep Rathod - 6 years, 6 months ago

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@Sandeep Rathod I used a program called TexWorks. It creates PDF's with the nice latex font that is characteristic in mathematical research papers.

Daniel Liu - 6 years, 6 months ago

@Daniel Liu Please can you post it on Brilliant. No matter what i tried I have mot been able to find your inequality. P.s. Is it in the paper .If so where?

Sualeh Asif - 6 years, 6 months ago

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It should be right under section 2.

Daniel Liu - 6 years, 6 months ago

The Reverse Rearrangement Inequality Lower Bound is proven in the Rearrangement Inequality section in Math Olympiad Treasures by Titu Andreescu.

Rahul Saha - 6 years, 6 months ago
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