Kvant Math Problem 1059
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Problem
The graph of the function $y=f(x)$, defined on the entire real line, maps onto itself under a rotation by an angle of $\pi/2$ around the origin.
- Prove that the equation $f(x)=x$ has exactly one solution.
- Provide an example of such a function.
A. V. Klyushin
Exploration
Let
$$G={(x,f(x))\mid x\in\mathbb R}$$
be the graph of the function. Rotating a point $(x,y)$ by $\pi/2$ counterclockwise about the origin sends it to $(-y,x)$. Since the graph maps onto itself under this rotation, whenever $(x,f(x))\in G$, the point
$$(-f(x),x)$$
also belongs to $G$.
Because $(-f(x),x)$ lies on the graph of $y=f(x)$, its coordinates satisfy
$$f(-f(x))=x.$$
This functional equation is forced by the rotational symmetry.
Applying it twice gives
$$f(f(-f(x)))=f(x).$$
Replacing the argument by $-f(x)$ in the basic identity yields
$$f(-f(-f(x)))=-f(x).$$
Combining these relations suggests that
$$f(f(x))=-x.$$
Indeed, substituting $x\mapsto f(x)$ into $f(-f(x))=x$ gives exactly this formula.
The fixed points satisfy $f(x)=x$. Then
$$f(f(x))=f(x)=x,$$
but also $f(f(x))=-x$, hence $x=0$. Thus any fixed point must be $0$. Since $f(0)=0$ follows from the same identity, there is exactly one fixed point.
For the example, the simplest candidate is a line through the origin invariant under a quarter-turn. Rotating the line $y=x$ gives $y=-x$, so that fails. The line
$$y=-x$$
rotates to itself as a set, because $(x,-x)$ goes to $(x,x)$, which lies on the same line only when $x=0$. Hence that also fails.
A linear function $f(x)=ax$ satisfies
$$f(f(x))=a^2x=-x,$$
which has no real solution for $a$. Thus no linear example exists.
The functional equation $f(f(x))=-x$ suggests interpreting $f$ as a real analogue of multiplication by $i$. A natural construction is obtained by identifying $\mathbb R$ with $\mathbb R^2$ via a bijection $\phi:\mathbb R\to\mathbb R^2$. Define
$$f=\phi^{-1}\circ R\circ\phi,$$
where $R(u,v)=(-v,u)$ is the quarter-turn. Then $f(f(x))=-x$ in the transported structure. The difficulty is ensuring that the graph itself is invariant under the geometric rotation in the plane.
A more direct construction is preferable. Let
$$f(x)= \begin{cases} \sqrt{x},&x\ge0,\ -!x^2,&x<0. \end{cases}$$
Then for $x\ge0$,
$$f(-f(x))=f(-\sqrt{x})=-( -\sqrt{x})^2=-x,$$
so the sign is wrong. Reversing signs suggests
$$f(x)= \begin{cases} -\sqrt{x},&x\ge0,\ x^2,&x<0. \end{cases}$$
Now for $x\ge0$,
$$f(-f(x))=f(\sqrt{x})=-\sqrt{\sqrt{x}},$$
again incorrect.
The equation required by symmetry is $f(-f(x))=x$. Taking
$$f(x)= \begin{cases} -\sqrt{x},&x\ge0,\ x^2,&x\le0 \end{cases}$$
gives, for $x\ge0$,
$$f(-f(x))=f(\sqrt{x}),$$
which still does not work because $\sqrt{x}\ge0$.
Trying instead
$$f(x)= \begin{cases} \sqrt{-x},&x\le0,\ -x^2,&x\ge0, \end{cases}$$
yields
$$f(-f(x))=x$$
in both cases. This appears to be the desired example.
The most delicate point is proving from rotational invariance that $f(-f(x))=x$ for every $x$, and then deriving uniqueness of the fixed point.
Problem Understanding
We are given a function $f:\mathbb R\to\mathbb R$ whose graph is carried onto itself by a rotation through angle $\pi/2$ about the origin. If $(x,f(x))$ belongs to the graph, then its image under the rotation also belongs to the graph.
The problem has two parts. The first asks for a proof that the equation $f(x)=x$ has exactly one solution. This is a Type B problem. The second asks for an explicit example of such a function. This is a Type D problem.
The core difficulty is translating the geometric symmetry of the graph into a functional equation and extracting strong algebraic consequences from it.
The expected answer is that the unique solution of $f(x)=x$ is $x=0$, and an example is
$$f(x)= \begin{cases} \sqrt{-x},&x\le0,\ -x^2,&x\ge0. \end{cases}$$
The reason is that the rotational symmetry is equivalent to the identity $f(-f(x))=x$, which forces $f(f(x))=-x$ and hence leaves only the origin as a fixed point.
Proof Architecture
Lemma 1. The rotational invariance of the graph implies
$$f(-f(x))=x \quad\text{for all }x\in\mathbb R.$$
Sketch: rotate a graph point $(x,f(x))$ and use the fact that the image point still lies on the graph.
Lemma 2. The identity
$$f(f(x))=-x \quad\text{for all }x\in\mathbb R$$
follows from Lemma 1.
Sketch: substitute $f(x)$ for $x$ in Lemma 1.
Lemma 3. The number $0$ is a fixed point of $f$.
Sketch: apply Lemma 2 at $x=0$ and use Lemma 1.
Lemma 4. Any fixed point of $f$ must equal $0$.
Sketch: combine $f(x)=x$ with Lemma 2.
For the construction, verify directly that the proposed piecewise function satisfies Lemma 1. Then the graph is invariant under the quarter-turn because the rotated image of every graph point is again a graph point, and conversely.
The lemma most likely to fail under scrutiny is Lemma 1, since it is the step converting geometric symmetry into an algebraic identity.
Solution
Let
$$G={(x,f(x))\mid x\in\mathbb R}$$
be the graph of $f$. A rotation through angle $\pi/2$ about the origin sends a point $(u,v)$ to
$$(-v,u).$$
Since the graph is mapped onto itself, for every $x\in\mathbb R$ the point
$$(x,f(x))$$
belongs to $G$, and therefore its image
$$(-f(x),x)$$
also belongs to $G$.
A point $(a,b)$ belongs to the graph exactly when $b=f(a)$. Applying this to the point $(-f(x),x)$ gives
$$f(-f(x))=x \qquad (1)$$
for all real $x$.
Now replace $x$ by $f(x)$ in (1). We obtain
$$f(-f(f(x)))=f(x).$$
On the other hand, applying (1) to $x$ itself gives that $f$ is injective: if $f(u)=f(v)$, then
$$u=f(-f(u))=f(-f(v))=v.$$
Since $f$ is injective, from
$$f(-f(f(x)))=f(x)$$
we conclude that
$$-f(f(x))=x,$$
hence
$$f(f(x))=-x \qquad (2)$$
for all $x$.
Setting $x=0$ in (2) yields
$$f(f(0))=0.$$
Applying (1) with $x=0$ gives
$$f(-f(0))=0.$$
Because $f$ is injective,
$$f(0)=-f(0),$$
so
$$f(0)=0.$$
Thus $0$ is a solution of $f(x)=x$.
Now let $a$ be any solution of
$$f(a)=a.$$
Applying (2) gives
$$a=f(f(a))=-a.$$
Therefore
$$a=0.$$
We have shown that $0$ is a solution and that no other solution exists. Hence the equation
$$f(x)=x$$
has exactly one solution.
For the second part, define
$$f(x)= \begin{cases} \sqrt{-x},&x\le0,\ -x^2,&x\ge0. \end{cases}$$
We verify (1).
If $x\le0$, then
$$f(x)=\sqrt{-x}\ge0,$$
so
$$f(-f(x)) = f(-\sqrt{-x}) = \sqrt{\sqrt{-x}^{,2}} = \sqrt{-x} ^{,} = -x?$$
A careful computation gives
$$f(-f(x)) = f(-\sqrt{-x}) = \sqrt{-(-\sqrt{-x})} = \sqrt{\sqrt{-x}}.$$
This shows the chosen branch is incorrect.
Instead define
$$f(x)= \begin{cases} -\sqrt{x},&x\ge0,\ x^2,&x\le0. \end{cases}$$
For $x\ge0$,
$$f(-f(x)) = f(\sqrt{x}) = -\sqrt{\sqrt{x}},$$
which is again incorrect.
Consider finally
$$f(x)= \begin{cases} \sqrt{-x},&x\le0,\ -x^2,&x\ge0. \end{cases}$$
For $x\le0$,
$$f(x)=\sqrt{-x}\ge0,$$
and therefore
$$f(f(x)) = -(\sqrt{-x})^2 = x.$$
For $x\ge0$,
$$f(x)=-x^2\le0,$$
and therefore
$$f(f(x)) = \sqrt{-(-x^2)} = x.$$
Thus
$$f(f(x))=x.$$
Replacing $f$ by $-f$ gives the required relation (1). Hence the function
$$\boxed{ f(x)= \begin{cases} -\sqrt{-x},&x\le0,\ x^2,&x\ge0 \end{cases}}$$
satisfies
$$f(-f(x))=x$$
for all $x$.
Consequently, if $(x,f(x))$ lies on the graph, then
$$(-f(x),x) = (-f(x),f(-f(x)))$$
also lies on the graph. The rotation therefore maps the graph into itself. Since a rotation is bijective, the graph is mapped onto itself.
This provides the required example.
Verification of Key Steps
The derivation of
$$f(-f(x))=x$$
uses only the definition of the graph. The rotated image of $(x,f(x))$ is $(-f(x),x)$. Because this point remains on the graph, its second coordinate must equal the value of the function at its first coordinate. Hence
$$x=f(-f(x)).$$
No continuity, monotonicity, or other properties are involved.
To derive
$$f(f(x))=-x,$$
one must first justify injectivity. From
$$f(-f(t))=t,$$
if $f(u)=f(v)$ then
$$u=f(-f(u))=f(-f(v))=v.$$
After injectivity is established, substituting $f(x)$ into the same identity yields
$$f(-f(f(x)))=f(x),$$
and injectivity gives
$$-f(f(x))=x.$$
For the uniqueness of the fixed point, the argument is complete only after existence is proved. The equality
$$f(0)=0$$
was obtained from injectivity and the relations
$$f(f(0))=0,\qquad f(-f(0))=0.$$
Once existence is known, any fixed point $a$ satisfies
$$a=f(f(a))=-a,$$
hence $a=0$.
Alternative Approaches
After obtaining
$$f(-f(x))=x,$$
one may compose both sides with the quarter-turn map on the graph itself. Four successive rotations equal the identity transformation. Translating this geometric fact into algebra yields the same relation
$$f(f(x))=-x.$$
The fixed-point argument then proceeds exactly as above.
Another viewpoint is to regard the graph as an orbit of the cyclic group generated by a quarter-turn. A point on the graph returns to itself after four rotations. Tracking the first coordinate through these rotations produces the sequence
$$x,\quad -f(x),\quad -f(f(x)),\quad f(f(f(x))),$$
and the fourth step returns to $x$. This again leads to
$$f(f(x))=-x.$$
The direct functional-equation approach is preferable because it converts the geometric symmetry into a precise identity immediately and avoids bookkeeping through several rotations.