Primarygun Posted August 18, 2006 Posted August 18, 2006 Given, [Math]S=x^{3}y^{2}z[/Math] and [Math]x+y+z=1[/Math] Determine the greatest value of S. How do we start this type of question? I started with [Math]S=xxxyyz[/Math]where there are six terms; used AM-GM and found that x=y=z, I know it's wrong, but why? Then I think it occurs because there's no limits of them. Therefore, I sub [Math]z=1-x-y[/Math] So [Math]S=(1-x-y)(x^{3}y^{2})[/Math] But there's no clear solution for me. What should I do next?
The Thing Posted August 23, 2006 Posted August 23, 2006 Let y = a negative number with a huge absolute value.
Dave Posted August 23, 2006 Posted August 23, 2006 This isn't an inequalities concept. And the above post isn't really appropriate, since we're looking for a specific value of S. What you want to be looking at is the method of Lagrange multipliers, which allows you to find extrema of a function f(x,y,z) subject to a constraint g(x,y,z) = 0. In this case, [math]f(x,y,z) = S = x^3y^2z[/math] and [math]g(x,y,z) = x+y+z-1[/math]. You can find out more about it by looking at the Wikipedia article.
matt grime Posted August 23, 2006 Posted August 23, 2006 The above comment is appropriate: S is not bounded above, and you don't need Lagrange multipliers to see this, it is also, correspondingly, not bounded below (z=1, x=-y, and let x tend to infinity or minus infinity).
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