Found problems: 85335
2017 VTRMC, 4
Let $P$ be an interior point of a triangle of area $T$. Through the point $P$, draw lines parallel to the three sides, partitioning the triangle into three triangles and three parallelograms. Let $a$, $b$ and $c$ be the areas of the three triangles. Prove that $ \sqrt { T } = \sqrt { a } + \sqrt { b } + \sqrt { c } $.
2020 Princeton University Math Competition, 8
Let there be a tiger, William, at the origin. William leaps $ 1$ unit in a random direction, then leaps $2$ units in a random direction, and so forth until he leaps $15$ units in a random direction to celebrate PUMaC’s 15th year.
There exists a circle centered at the origin such that the probability that William is contained in the circle (assume William is a point) is exactly $1/2$ after the $15$ leaps. The area of that circle can be written as $A\pi$. What is $A$?
1990 IMO Longlists, 37
An eccentric mathematician has a ladder with $ n$ rungs that he always ascends and descends in the following way: When he ascends, each step he takes covers $ a$ rungs of the ladder, and when he descends, each step he takes covers $ b$ rungs of the ladder, where $ a$ and $ b$ are fixed positive integers. By a sequence of ascending and descending steps he can climb from ground level to the top rung of the ladder and come back down to ground level again. Find, with proof, the minimum value of $ n,$ expressed in terms of $ a$ and $ b.$
1997 Slovenia National Olympiad, Problem 3
Let $C$ and $D$ be different points on the semicircle with diameter $AB$. The lines $AC$ and $BD$ intersect at $E$, and the lines $AD$ and $BC$ intersect at $F$. Prove that the midpoints $X,Y,Z$ of the segments $AB,CD,EF$ respectively are collinear.
2009 Germany Team Selection Test, 1
Let $n$ be a positive integer and let $p$ be a prime number. Prove that if $a$, $b$, $c$ are integers (not necessarily positive) satisfying the equations \[ a^n + pb = b^n + pc = c^n + pa\] then $a = b = c$.
[i]Proposed by Angelo Di Pasquale, Australia[/i]
2021 Thailand Online MO, P8
Let $\mathbb N$ be the set of positive integers. Determine all functions $f:\mathbb N\times\mathbb N\to\mathbb N$ that satisfy both of the following conditions:
[list]
[*]$f(\gcd (a,b),c) = \gcd (a,f(c,b))$ for all $a,b,c \in \mathbb{N}$.
[*]$f(a,a) \geq a$ for all $a \in \mathbb{N}$.
[/list]
2023 USAMTS Problems, 5
Let $\omega$ be the unit circle in the $xy$-plane in $3$-dimensional space. Find all points $P$ not on the $xy$-plane that satisfy the following condition: There exist points $A,B,C$ on $\omega$ such that
$$ \angle APB = \angle APC = \angle BPC = 90^\circ.$$
2023 MOAA, 6
Call a set of integers [i]unpredictable[/i] if no four elements in the set form an arithmetic sequence. How many unordered [i]unpredictable[/i] sets of five distinct positive integers $\{a, b, c, d, e\}$ exist such that all elements are strictly less than $12$?
[i]Proposed by Anthony Yang[/i]
2007 Purple Comet Problems, 24
Starting with a sequence of $n 1's$, you can insert plus signs to get various sums. For example, when $n = 10$, you can get the sum $1 + 1 + 1 + 11 + 11 + 111 = 136$, and the sum $1 + 1 + 11 + 111 + 111 = 235$. Find the number of values of $n$ so that the sum of $1111$ is possible.
I Soros Olympiad 1994-95 (Rus + Ukr), 9.6
Given a regular hexagon, whose sidelength is $ 1$ . What is the largest number of circles of radius $\frac{\sqrt3}{4}$ can be placed without overlapping inside such a hexagon? (Circles can touch each other and the sides of the hexagon.)
2015 Poland - Second Round, 3
Let $ABC$ be a triangle. Let $K$ be a midpoint of $BC$ and $M$ be a point on the segment $AB$. $L=KM \cap AC$ and $C$ lies on the segment $AC$ between $A$ and $L$. Let $N$ be a midpoint of $ML$. $AN$ cuts circumcircle of $\Delta ABC$ in $S$ and $S \neq N$. Prove that circumcircle of $\Delta KSN$ is tangent to $BC$.
1986 China Team Selection Test, 2
Given a tetrahedron $ABCD$, $E$, $F$, $G$, are on the respectively on the segments $AB$, $AC$ and $AD$. Prove that:
i) area $EFG \leq$ max{area $ABC$,area $ABD$,area $ACD$,area $BCD$}.
ii) The same as above replacing "area" for "perimeter".
1986 IMO Longlists, 33
Let $A,B$ be adjacent vertices of a regular $n$-gon ($n\ge5$) with center $O$. A triangle $XYZ$, which is congruent to and initially coincides with $OAB$, moves in the plane in such a way that $Y$ and $Z$ each trace out the whole boundary of the polygon, with $X$ remaining inside the polygon. Find the locus of $X$.
2016 Ecuador NMO (OMEC), 1
Prove that there are no positive integers $x, y$ such that: $(x + 1)^2 + (x + 2)^2 +...+ (x + 9)^2 = y^2$
2014 IFYM, Sozopol, 5
The real function $f$ is defined for $\forall$ $x\in \mathbb{R}$ and $f(0)=0$. Also $f(9+x)=f(9-x)$ and $f(x-10)=f(-x-10)$ for $\forall$ $x\in \mathbb{R}$. What’s the least number of zeros $f$ can have in the interval $[0;2014]$? Does this change, if $f$ is also continuous?
2017 CMIMC Combinatorics, 10
Ryan stands on the bottom-left square of a 2017 by 2017 grid of squares, where each square is colored either black, gray, or white according to the pattern as depicted to the right. Each second he moves either one square up, one square to the right, or both one up and to the right, selecting between these three options uniformly and independently. Noting that he begins on a black square, find the probability that Ryan is still on a black square after 2017 seconds.
[center][img]http://i.imgur.com/WNp59XW.png[/img][/center]
2010 National Olympiad First Round, 28
Only $A$ and $B$ have $n$ friends in a village of $2010$ people. The other $2008$ people have all different numbers of friends. How many possible values of $n$ are there?
$ \textbf{(A)}\ 1
\qquad\textbf{(B)}\ 2
\qquad\textbf{(C)}\ 3
\qquad\textbf{(D)}\ 4
\qquad\textbf{(E)}\ \text{None}
$
1976 IMO Longlists, 30
Prove that if $P(x) = (x-a)^kQ(x)$, where $k$ is a positive integer, $a$ is a nonzero real number, $Q(x)$ is a nonzero polynomial, then $P(x)$ has at least $k + 1$ nonzero coefficients.
2017 CCA Math Bonanza, TB2
Let $ABC$ be a triangle. $D$ and $E$ are points on line segments $BC$ and $AC$, respectively, such that $AD=60$, $BD=189$, $CD=36$, $AE=40$, and $CE=50$. What is $AB+DE$?
[i]2017 CCA Math Bonanza Tiebreaker Round #2[/i]
1968 All Soviet Union Mathematical Olympiad, 095
What is greater, $31^{11}$ or $17^{14}$ ?
1956 Poland - Second Round, 1
For what value of $ m $ is the polynomial $ x^3 + y^3 + z^3 + mxyz $ divisible by $ x + y + z $?
1971 AMC 12/AHSME, 30
Given the linear fractional transformation of $x$ into $f_1(x)=\dfrac{2x-1}{x+1}$. Define $f_{n+1}(x)=f_1(f_n(x))$ for $n=1,2,3,\cdots$. Assuming that $f_{35}(x)=f_5(x)$, it follows that $f_{28}(x)$ is equal to
$\textbf{(A) }x\qquad\textbf{(B) }\frac{1}{x}\qquad\textbf{(C) }\frac{x-1}{x}\qquad\textbf{(D) }\frac{1}{1-x}\qquad \textbf{(E) }\text{None of these}$
2016 SDMO (Middle School), 4
There is an infinitely tall tetrahedral stack of spheres where each row of the tetrahedron consists of a triangular arrangement of spheres, as shown below. There is $1$ sphere in the top row (which we will call row $0$), $3$ spheres in row $1$, $6$ spheres in row $2$, $10$ spheres in row $3$, etc. The top-most sphere in row $0$ is assigned the number $1$. We then assign each other sphere the sum of the number(s) assigned to the sphere(s) which touch it in the row directly above it. Find a simplified expression in terms of $n$ for the sum of the numbers assigned to each sphere from row $0$ to row $n$.
[asy]
import three;
import solids;
size(8cm);
//currentprojection = perspective(1, 1, 10);
triple backright = (-2, 0, 0), backleft = (-1, -sqrt(3), 0), backup = (-1, -sqrt(3) / 3, 2 * sqrt(6) / 3);
draw(shift(2 * backleft) * surface(sphere(1,20)), white); //2
draw(shift(backleft + backright) * surface(sphere(1,20)), white); //2
draw(shift(2 * backright) * surface(sphere(1,20)), white); //3
draw(shift(backup + backleft) * surface(sphere(1,20)), white);
draw(shift(backup + backright) * surface(sphere(1,20)), white);
draw(shift(2 * backup) * surface(sphere(1,20)), white);
draw(shift(backleft) * surface(sphere(1,20)), white);
draw(shift(backright) * surface(sphere(1,20)), white);
draw(shift(backup) * surface(sphere(1,20)), white);
draw(surface(sphere(1,20)), white);
label("Row 0", 2 * backup, 15 * dir(20));
label("Row 1", backup, 25 * dir(20));
label("Row 2", O, 35 * dir(20));
dot(-backup);
dot(-7 * backup / 8);
dot(-6 * backup / 8);
dot((backleft - backup) + backleft * 2);
dot(5 * (backleft - backup) / 4 + backleft * 2);
dot(6 * (backleft - backup) / 4 + backleft * 2);
dot((backright - backup) + backright * 2);
dot(5 * (backright - backup) / 4 + backright * 2);
dot(6 * (backright - backup) / 4 + backright * 2);
[/asy]
2007 All-Russian Olympiad Regional Round, 9.3
$ 25$ boys and some girls came to the party and discovered an interesting property of their company. Take an arbitrary group of $ \geq 10$ boys and all the girls which are acquainted with at least one of them. Then in the joint group, the number of girls is by one greater than the number of boys. Prove that there exists a girl who is acquainted with at least $ 16$ boys.
2022 Kyiv City MO Round 1, Problem 2
There are $n$ sticks which have distinct integer length. Suppose that it's possible to form a non-degenerate triangle from any $3$ distinct sticks among them. It's also known that there are sticks of lengths $5$ and $12$ among them. What's the largest possible value of $n$ under such conditions?
[i](Proposed by Bogdan Rublov)[/i]