Stage 12 · Inequalities

12.6  The Basic Inequality

Two ways to average two positive numbers — and why the gap between them unlocks "largest" and "smallest."

For ages 15–17 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 4 of 4 in this lesson: 12.6.4 Finding extremes: biggest product, smallest sum

12.6.4 Finding extremes: biggest product, smallest sum

Now the payoff. The basic inequality is a two-sided machine, and which side you read depends on what's held constant.

Fixed sum → biggest product

From a + b ≥ 2√(ab), square both sides (both are positive): (a + b)² ≥ 4ab, so ab ≤ ((a + b)/2)². If the sum is locked, the product ab can only climb so high — and it hits the ceiling exactly when a = b.

Pinned · a + b = 10

With a + b = 10 fixed, ab ≤ (10/2)² = 5² = 25. The biggest possible product is 25, reached when a = b = 5. Check the three: terms positive ✓, sum fixed at 10 ✓, and a = b = 5 is allowed ✓. So 25 is a genuine maximum.

Fixed product → smallest sum

Read the same machine the other way. From a + b ≥ 2√(ab), if the product is locked at ab = P, then a + b ≥ 2√P. The sum can only sink so low — bottoming out when a = b = √P.

Pinned · ab = 16

With ab = 16 fixed, a + b ≥ 2√16 = 2 · 4 = 8. The smallest possible sum is 8, reached when a = b = 4 (and indeed 4 · 4 = 16 ✓). All three conditions hold, so 8 is a true minimum.

The flagship: x + k/x

The most common shape you'll meet is a number plus a constant over that number. For x > 0, the two terms x and k/x have a fixed product: x · (k/x) = k, a constant! So their sum is bounded below:

x + k/x ≥ 2√(x · k/x) = 2√k least value 2√k, reached when x = √k (so x = k/x)
The two terms x and k/x multiply to the constant k, so their sum is smallest when they're equal — that is, when x = √k.
expressionminimum (2√k)reached at x = √k
x + 1/x2x = 1
x + 4/x4x = 2
x + 9/x6x = 3

The flagship case x + 1/x ≥ 2 (least value 2 at x = 1) is worth memorizing. And note x + 4/x ≥ 2√4 = 4, reached at x = 2 (since there x = 4/x). Don't guess that the minimum is at x = 1 for x + 4/x — that gives 5, not the minimum. The minimum lives where the two terms balance.

Watch out

The minimum of x + k/x is not always at x = 1. It's at x = √k, where the two terms are equal. For x + 9/x the balance point is x = 3, giving the minimum 6 — plugging in x = 1 would wrongly suggest 10.

🎮 Try it Minimize x + k/x
Pick k, then slide x > 0. The curve is x + k/x; the dashed line is the floor 2√k. Find where the moving dot touches the floor — that's the minimum, at x = √k.
k
x
eastmath.com · 12.6 The Basic Inequality · 12.6.4 Finding extremes: biggest product, smallest sum