Found problems: 85335
2004 AIME Problems, 5
Alpha and Beta both took part in a two-day problem-solving competition. At the end of the second day, each had attempted questions worth a total of 500 points. Alpha scored 160 points out of 300 points attempted on the first day, and scored 140 points out of 200 points attempted on the second day. Beta who did not attempt 300 points on the first day, had a positive integer score on each of the two days, and Beta's daily success rate (points scored divided by points attempted) on each day was less than Alpha's on that day. Alpha's two-day success ratio was 300/500 = 3/5. The largest possible two-day success ratio that Beta could achieve is $m/n$, where $m$ and $n$ are relatively prime positive integers. What is $m+n$?
2015 Vietnam National Olympiad, 3
Given $m\in\mathbb{Z}^+$. Find all natural numbers $n$ that does not exceed $10^m$ satisfying the following conditions:
i) $3|n.$
ii) The digits of $n$ in decimal representation are in the set $\{2,0,1,5\}$.
2012 NIMO Problems, 6
A square is called [i]proper[/i] if its sides are parallel to the coordinate axes. Point $P$ is randomly selected inside a proper square $S$ with side length 2012. Denote by $T$ the largest proper square that lies within $S$ and has $P$ on its perimeter, and denote by $a$ the expected value of the side length of $T$. Compute $\lfloor a \rfloor$, the greatest integer less than or equal to $a$.
[i]Proposed by Lewis Chen[/i]
2016 BMT Spring, 3
Let $S$ be the set of all non-degenerate triangles with integer sidelengths, such that two of the sides are $20$ and $16$. Suppose we pick a triangle, at random, from this set. What is the probability that it is acute?
2025 Olympic Revenge, 3
Find all $f\colon\mathbf{R}\rightarrow\mathbf{R}$ such that
\[f(f(x)f(y)) = f(x + y) + f(xy)\]
for all $x,y\in\mathbf{R}$.
1992 Denmark MO - Mohr Contest, 1
A man in a rowing boat is at point A at a distance of $2$ kilometers from a straight coastline. By first rowing in to a point P and then strolling along the coast he reaches point B, which is at a distance of $5$ kilometers from C, which is the point on the coast closest to A. The man's speed at rest is $3$ kilometers per hour and his strolling speed is $5$ kilometers per hour. Decide where P should go be placed between C and B so that the man gets from A to B in the shortest possible time.
2008 Junior Balkan Team Selection Tests - Romania, 2
Let $ a,b,c$ be positive reals with $ ab \plus{} bc \plus{} ca \equal{} 3$. Prove that:
\[ \frac {1}{1 \plus{} a^2(b \plus{} c)} \plus{} \frac {1}{1 \plus{} b^2(a \plus{} c)} \plus{} \frac {1}{1 \plus{} c^2(b \plus{} a)}\le \frac {1}{abc}.
\]
1998 All-Russian Olympiad Regional Round, 8.5
Place numbers from $1$ to $9$ in the circles of the figure (see Fig. ) so that the sum of four numbers, finding located in the circles at the tops of all squares (there are six of them), was constant ,
[img]https://cdn.artofproblemsolving.com/attachments/8/8/5fe1e8c5949903dd9500b992c8139277cebe7f.png[/img]
2021 Purple Comet Problems, 9
Find $k$ such that $k\pi$ is the area of the region of points in the plane satisfying $$\frac{x^2+y^2+1}{11} \le x \le \frac{x^2+y^2+1}{7}.$$
2014 ASDAN Math Tournament, 12
Find the last two digits of $\tbinom{200}{100}$. Express the answer as an integer between $0$ and $99$. (e.g. if the last two digits are $05$, just write $5$.)
2014 Contests, 1
Suppose a class contains $100$ students. Let, for $1\le i\le 100$, the $i^{\text{th}}$ student have $a_i$ many friends. For $0\le j\le 99$ let us define $c_j$ to be the number of students who have strictly more than $j$ friends. Show that \begin{align*} & \sum_{i=1}^{100}a_i=\sum_{j=0}^{99}c_j \end{align*}
2005 Today's Calculation Of Integral, 51
A function $f(x)$ satisfies $f(x)=f\left(\frac{c}{x}\right)$ for some real number $c(>1)$ and all positive number $x$.
If $\int_1^{\sqrt{c}} \frac{f(x)}{x} dx=3$, evaluate $\int_1^c \frac{f(x)}{x} dx$
1972 IMO Longlists, 2
Find all real values of the parameter $a$ for which the system of equations
\[x^4 = yz - x^2 + a,\]
\[y^4 = zx - y^2 + a,\]
\[z^4 = xy - z^2 + a,\]
has at most one real solution.
2017 USAMTS Problems, 4
Zan starts with a rational number $\tfrac{a}{b}$ written on the board in lowest terms. Then, every second, Zan adds $1$ to both the numerator and denominator of the latest fraction and writes the result in lowest terms. Zan stops as soon as he writes a fraction of the form $\tfrac{n}{n+1}$, for some positive integer $n$. If $\tfrac{a}{b}$ started in that form, Zan does nothing.
As an example, if Zan starts with $\tfrac{13}{19}$, then after one second he writes $\tfrac{14}{20} = \tfrac{7}{10}$, then after two seconds $\tfrac{8}{11}$, then $\tfrac{9}{12} = \tfrac{3}{4}$, at which point he stops.
(a) Prove that Zan will stop in less than $b-a$ seconds.
(b) Show that if $\tfrac{n}{n+1}$ is the final number, then \[\frac{n-1}{n} < \frac{a}{b} \le \frac{n}{n+1}.\]
[i](Proposed by Michael Tang.)[/i]
1995 All-Russian Olympiad Regional Round, 10.2
Natural numbers $m$ and $n$ satisfy $$gcd(m,n)+lcm(m,n) = m+n. $$Prove that one of numbers $m,n$ divides the other.
2003 JHMMC 8, 6
Compute $\frac{55}{21}\times \frac{28} 5\times \frac 3 2$.
2009 Indonesia TST, 4
2008 boys and 2008 girls sit on 4016 chairs around a round table. Each boy brings a garland and each girl brings a chocolate. In an "activity", each person gives his/her goods to the nearest person on the left. After some activities, it turns out that all boys get chocolates and all girls get garlands. Find the number of possible arrangements.
2017 Harvard-MIT Mathematics Tournament, 28
Let $\dots, a_{-1}, a_0, a_1, a_2, \dots$ be a sequence of positive integers satisfying the folloring relations: $a_n = 0$ for $n < 0$, $a_0 = 1$, and for $n \ge 1$,
\[a_n = a_{n - 1} + 2(n - 1)a_{n - 2} + 9(n - 1)(n - 2)a_{n - 3} + 8(n - 1)(n - 2)(n - 3)a_{n - 4}.\]
Compute
\[\sum_{n \ge 0} \frac{10^n a_n}{n!}.\]
2014 PUMaC Geometry B, 3
In $\triangle ABC$, $E\in AC$, $D\in AB$, $P=BE\cap CD$. Given that $S\triangle BPC=12$, while the areas of $\triangle BPD$, $\triangle CPE$ and quadrilateral $AEPD$ are all the same, which is $x$. Find the value of $x$.
2021 German National Olympiad, 1
Determine all real numbers $a,b,c$ and $d$ with the following property: The numbers $a$ and $b$ are distinct roots of $2x^2-3cx+8d$ and the numbers $c$ and $d$ are distinct roots of $2x^2-3ax+8b$.
1979 Chisinau City MO, 179
Prove that the equation $x^2 + y^2 = 1979$ has no integer solutions.
2015 MMATHS, Mixer Round
[b]p1.[/b] Let $a_0, a_1,...,a_n$ be such that $a_n \ne 0$ and
$$(1 + x + x^3)^{341}(1 + 2x + x^2 + 2x^3 + 2x^4 + x^6)^{342} =\sum^n_{i=0}a_ix^i,$$
Find the number of odd numbers in the sequence a0; a1; : : : an.
[b]p2.[/b] Let $F_0 = 1$, $F_1 = 1$ and F$_k = F_{k-1} + F_{k-2}$. Let $P(x) =\sum^{99}_{k=0} x^{F_k}$ . The remainder when $P(x)$ is divided by $x^3 - 1$ can be expressed as $ax^2 + bx + c$. Find $2a + b$.
[b]p3.[/b] Let $a_n$ be the number of permutations of the numbers $S = \{1, 2,...,n\}$ such that for all $k$ with $1 \le k \le n$, the sum of $k$ and the number in the $k$th position of the permutation is a power of $2$. Compute $a_{2^0} + a_{2^1} +... + a_{2^{20}}$ .
[b]p4.[/b] Three identical balls are painted white and black, so that half of each sphere is a white hemisphere, and the other half is a black one. The three balls are placed on a plane surface, each with a random orientation, so that each ball has a point of contact with the other two. What is the probability that at at least one point of contact between two of the balls, both balls are the same color?
[b]p5.[/b] Compute the greatest positive integer $n$ such that there exists an odd integer $a$, for which $\frac{a^{2^n}-1}{4^{4^4}}$ is not an integer.
[b]p6.[/b] You are blind and cannot feel the difference between a coin that is heads up or tails up. There are $100$ coins in front of you and are told that exactly $10$ of them are heads up. On the back of this paper, explain how you can split the otherwise indistinguishable coins into two groups so that both groups have the same number of heads.
[b]p7.[/b] On the back of this page, write the best math pun you can think of. You’ll get a point if we chuckle.
[b]p8.[/b] Pick an integer between $1$ and $10$. If you pick $k$, and $n$ total teams pick $k$, then you’ll receive $\frac{k}{10n}$ points.
[b]p9.[/b] There are four prisoners in a dungeon. Tomorrow, they will be separated into a group of three in one room, and the other in a room by himself. Each will be given a hat to wear that is either black or white – two will be given white and two black. None of them will be able to communicate with each other and none will see his or her own hat color. The group of three is lined up, so that the one in the back can see the other two, the second can see the first, but the first cannot see the others. If anyone is certain of their hat color, then they immediately shout that they know it to the rest of the group. If they can secretly prove it to the guard, they are saved. They only say something if they’re sure. Which person is sure to survive?
[b]p10.[/b] Down the road, there are $10$ prisoners in a dungeon. Tomorrow they will be lined up in a single room and each given a black or white hat – this time they don’t know how many of each. The person in the back can see everyone’s hat besides his own, and similarly everyone else can only see the hats of the people in front of them. The person in the back will shout out a guess for his hat color and will be saved if and only if he is right. Then the person in front of him will have to guess, and this will continue until everyone has the opportunity to be saved. Each person can only say his or her guess of “white” or “black” when their turn comes, and no other signals may be made. If they have the night before receiving the hats to try to devise some sort of code, how many people at a minimum can be saved with the most optimal code? Describe the code on the back of this paper for full points.
[b]p11.[/b] A few of the problems on this mixer contest were taken from last year’s event. One of them had fewer than $5$ correct answers, and most of the answers given were the same incorrect answer. Half a point will be given if you can guess the number of the problem on this test that corresponds to last year’s question, and another $.5$ points will be given if you can guess the very common incorrect answer.
PS. You should use hide for answers. Collected [url=https://artofproblemsolving.com/community/c5h2760506p24143309]here[/url].
2022 China Team Selection Test, 4
Let $ABC$ be an acute triangle with $\angle ACB>2 \angle ABC$. Let $I$ be the incenter of $ABC$, $K$ is the reflection of $I$ in line $BC$. Let line $BA$ and $KC$ intersect at $D$. The line through $B$ parallel to $CI$ intersects the minor arc $BC$ on the circumcircle of $ABC$ at $E(E \neq B)$. The line through $A$ parallel to $BC$ intersects the line $BE$ at $F$.
Prove that if $BF=CE$, then $FK=AD$.
VMEO III 2006 Shortlist, N2
Let $a_1,a_2,...$ be an arithmetic sequence with the common difference between terms is positive. Assume there are $k$ terms of this sequence creates an geometric sequence with common ratio $d$. Prove that $n\ge 2^{k-1}$.
1996 Dutch Mathematical Olympiad, 1
How many different (non similar) triangles are there whose angles have an integer number of degrees?