This website contains problems from math contests. Problems and corresponding tags were obtained from the Art of Problem Solving website.

Tags were heavily modified to better represent problems.

AND:
OR:
NO:

Found problems: 85335

2004 India National Olympiad, 5

S is the set of all ($a$, $b$, $c$, $d$, $e$, $f$) where $a$, $b$, $c$, $d$, $e$, $f$ are integers such that $a^2 + b^2 + c^2 + d^2 + e^2 = f^2$. Find the largest $k$ which divides abcdef for all members of $S$.

2017 Iran MO (3rd round), 3

Let $a,b$ and $c$ be positive real numbers. Prove that $$\sum_{cyc} \frac {a^3b}{(3a+2b)^3} \ge \sum_{cyc} \frac {a^2bc}{(2a+2b+c)^3} $$

2002 AMC 10, 12

Tags:
For which of the following values of $ k$ does the equation $ \frac{x\minus{}1}{x\minus{}2}\equal{}\frac{x\minus{}k}{x\minus{}6}$ have no solution for $ x$? $ \textbf{(A)}\ 1 \qquad \textbf{(B)}\ 2 \qquad \textbf{(C)}\ 3 \qquad \textbf{(D)}\ 4 \qquad \textbf{(E)}\ 5$

2015 Denmark MO - Mohr Contest, 2

The numbers $1, 2, 3, . . . , 624$ are paired in such a way that the sum of the two numbers in each pair is $625$. For example $1$ and $624$ form a pair, and $30$ and $595$ form a pair. In how many of the $312$ pairs does the smaller number evenly divide the larger?

2006 All-Russian Olympiad Regional Round, 9.8

A number $N$ that is not divisible by $81$ can be represented as a sum of squares of three integers divisible by $3$. Prove that it is also representable as the sum of the squares of three integers not divisible by $3$.

2013 All-Russian Olympiad, 3

The incircle of triangle $ ABC $ has centre $I$ and touches the sides $ BC $, $ CA $, $ AB $ at points $ A_1 $, $ B_1 $, $ C_1 $, respectively. Let $ I_a $, $ I_b $, $ I_c $ be excentres of triangle $ ABC $, touching the sides $ BC $, $ CA $, $ AB $ respectively. The segments $ I_aB_1 $ and $ I_bA_1 $ intersect at $ C_2 $. Similarly, segments $ I_bC_1 $ and $ I_cB_1 $ intersect at $ A_2 $, and the segments $ I_cA_1 $ and $ I_aC_1 $ at $ B_2 $. Prove that $ I $ is the center of the circumcircle of the triangle $ A_2B_2C_2 $. [i]L. Emelyanov, A. Polyansky[/i]

2006 Harvard-MIT Mathematics Tournament, 2

Tags:
Find all real solutions $(x,y)$ of the system $x^2+y=12=y^2+x$.

2020 Tuymaada Olympiad, 3

Each edge of a complete graph with $101$ vertices is marked with $1$ or $-1$. It is known that absolute value of the sum of numbers on all the edges is less than $150$. Prove that the graph contains a path visiting each vertex exactly once such that the sum of numbers on all edges of this path is zero. [i](Y. Caro, A. Hansberg, J. Lauri, C. Zarb)[/i]

2025 Spain Mathematical Olympiad, 6

Let $\mathbb{R}_{\neq 0}$ be the set of nonzero real numbers. Find all functions $f:\mathbb{R}_{\neq 0}\rightarrow\mathbb{R}_{\neq 0}$ such that, for all $x,y\in\mathbb{R}_{\neq 0}$, \[(x-y)f(y^2)+f\left(xy\,f\left(\frac{x^2}{y}\right)\right)=f(y^2f(y)).\]

2011 Putnam, A5

Let $F:\mathbb{R}^2\to\mathbb{R}$ and $g:\mathbb{R}\to\mathbb{R}$ be twice continuously differentiable functions with the following properties: • $F(u,u)=0$ for every $u\in\mathbb{R};$ • for every $x\in\mathbb{R},g(x)>0$ and $x^2g(x)\le 1;$ • for every $(u,v)\in\mathbb{R}^2,$ the vector $\nabla F(u,v)$ is either $\mathbf{0}$ or parallel to the vector $\langle g(u),-g(v)\rangle.$ Prove that there exists a constant $C$ such that for every $n\ge 2$ and any $x_1,\dots,x_{n+1}\in\mathbb{R},$ we have \[\min_{i\ne j}|F(x_i,x_j)|\le\frac{C}{n}.\]

2009 Canadian Mathematical Olympiad Qualification Repechage, 1

Tags: algebra
Determine all solutions to the system of equations \begin{align*}x+y+z=2 \\ x^2-y^2-z^2=2 \\ x-3y^2+z=0\end{align*}

2018 Argentina National Olympiad Level 2, 1

A list of $2018$ numbers is created using the following procedure: the first number is $47$, the second number is $74$, and from there, each number is equal to the number formed by the last two digits of the sum of the two previous numbers:$$47, 74, 21, 95, 16, 11, \dots$$ Bruno squares each of the $2018$ numbers and sums them. Determine the remainder when this sum is divided by $8$.

2018 Taiwan TST Round 2, 2

Tags: geometry
Let $ABC$ be a triangle with circumcircle $\Omega$, circumcenter $O$ and orthocenter $H$. Let $S$ lie on $\Omega$ and $P$ lie on $BC$ such that $\angle ASP=90^\circ$, line $SH$ intersects the circumcircle of $\triangle APS$ at $X\neq S$. Suppose $OP$ intersects $CA,AB$ at $Q,R$, respectively, $QY,RZ$ are the altitude of $\triangle AQR$. Prove that $X,Y,Z$ are collinear. [i]Proposed by Shuang-Yen Lee[/i]

1961 AMC 12/AHSME, 26

For a given arithmetic series the sum of the first $50$ terms is $200$, and the sum of the next $50$ terms is $2700$. The first term in the series is: ${{ \textbf{(A)}\ -1221 \qquad\textbf{(B)}\ -21.5 \qquad\textbf{(C)}\ -20.5 \qquad\textbf{(D)}\ 3 }\qquad\textbf{(E)}\ 3.5 } $

2009 Singapore Senior Math Olympiad, 5

In an archery competition of 30 contestants, the target is divided into two zones, zone 1 and zone 2. Each arrow hitting the zone 1 gets 10 points, when hitting zone 2 will get 5 points and no score for miss. Each contestant throws 16 arrows. At the end of the competition, the statistics show that more than 50% of the arrows hit zone 2. The number of arrows that hit zone 1 is equal to the arrows which are missed. Prove than there are two contestants having equal score.

2009 Indonesia TST, 3

Let $ x,y,z$ be real numbers. Find the minimum value of $ x^2\plus{}y^2\plus{}z^2$ if $ x^3\plus{}y^3\plus{}z^3\minus{}3xyz\equal{}1$.

2022 AMC 10, 12

Tags: logic
On Halloween 31 children walked into the principal's office asking for candy. They can be classified into three types: Some always lie; some always tell the truth; and some alternately lie and tell the truth. The alternaters arbitrarily choose their first response, either a lie or the truth, but each subsequent statement has the opposite truth value from its predecessor. The principal asked everyone the same three questions in this order. "Are you a truth-teller?" The principal gave a piece of candy to each of the 22 children who answered yes. "Are you an alternater?" The principal gave a piece of candy to each of the 15 children who answered yes. "Are you a liar?" The principal gave a piece of candy to each of the 9 children who answered yes. How many pieces of candy in all did the principal give to the children who always tell the truth? $\textbf{(A) }7\qquad\textbf{(B) }12\qquad\textbf{(C) }21\qquad\textbf{(D) }27\qquad\textbf{(E) }31$

2009 Middle European Mathematical Olympiad, 9

Let $ ABCD$ be a parallelogram with $ \angle BAD \equal{} 60$ and denote by $ E$ the intersection of its diagonals. The circumcircle of triangle $ ACD$ meets the line $ BA$ at $ K \ne A$, the line $ BD$ at $ P \ne D$ and the line $ BC$ at $ L\ne C$. The line $ EP$ intersects the circumcircle of triangle $ CEL$ at points $ E$ and $ M$. Prove that triangles $ KLM$ and $ CAP$ are congruent.

2003 Junior Macedonian Mathematical Olympiad, Problem 5

Is it possible to cover a $2003 \times 2003$ chessboard (without overlap) using only horizontal $1 \times 2$ dominoes and only vertical $3 \times 1$ trominoes?

2022 Yasinsky Geometry Olympiad, 5

Let $X$ be an arbitrary point on side $BC$ of triangle ABC. Triangle $T$ formed by the bisectors of the angles $ABC$, $ACB$ and $AXC$. Prove that: a) the circumscribed circle of the triangle $T$ passes through the vertex $A$. b) the orthocenter of triangle $T$ lies on line $BC$. (Dmytro Prokopenko)

2015 Tournament of Towns, 5

Several distinct real numbers are written on a blackboard. Peter wants to create an algebraic expression such that among its values there would be these and only these numbers. He may use any real numbers, brackets, signs $+, -, \times$ and a special sign $\pm$. Usage of $\pm$ is equivalent to usage of $+$ and $-$ in all possible combinations. For instance, the expression $5 \pm 1$ results in $\{4, 6\}$, while $(2 \pm 0.5) \pm 0.5$ results in $\{1, 2, 3\}$. Can Peter construct an expression if the numbers on the blackboard are : (a) $1, 2, 4$ ? [i]($2$ points)[/i] (b) any $100$ distinct real numbers ? [i]($6$ points)[/i]

2020 HMNT (HMMO), 5

The classrooms at MIT are each identified with a positive integer (with no leading zeroes). One day, as President Reif walks down the Infinite Corridor, he notices that a digit zero on a room sign has fallen off. Let $N$ be the original number of the room, and let $M$ be the room number as shown on the sign. The smallest interval containing all possible values of $\frac{M}{N}$ can be expressed as $[\frac{a}{b}, \frac{c}{d} )$ where $a,b,c,d$ are positive integers with $\gcd(a,b) = \gcd(c,d) = 1$. Compute $1000a+100b+10c+d$.

2021 Nigerian MO Round 3, Problem 2

Let $B, C, D, E$ be four pairwise distinct collinear points and let $A$ be a point not on ine $BC$. Now, let the circumcircle of $\triangle ABC$ meet $AD$ and $AE$ respectively again at $F$ and $G$. Show that $DEFG$ is cyclic if and only if $AB=AC$.

1977 Polish MO Finals, 3

Consider the polynomial $W(x) = (x - a)^kQ(x)$, where $a \neq 0$, $Q$ is a nonzero polynomial, and $k$ a natural number. Prove that $W$ has at least $k + 1$ nonzero coefficients.

PEN O Problems, 15

Is it possible to choose $1983$ distinct positive integers, all less than or equal to $10^{5}$, no three of which are consecutive terms of an arithmetic progression?