Found problems: 85335
2000 Estonia National Olympiad, 2
In a three-digit positive integer $M$, the number of hundreds is less than the number of tenths and the number of tenths is less than the number of ones. The arithmetic mean of the integer three-digit numbers obtained by arranging the number $M$ and its numbers ends with the number $5$. Find all such three-digit numbers $M$.
2021 Science ON Seniors, 4
$ABCD$ is a cyclic convex quadrilateral whose diagonals meet at $X$. The circle $(AXD)$ cuts $CD$ again at $V$ and the circle $(BXC)$ cuts $AB$ again at $U$, such that $D$ lies strictly between $C$ and $V$ and $B$ lies strictly between $A$ and $U$. Let $P\in AB\cap CD$.\\ \\
If $M$ is the intersection point of the tangents to $U$ and $V$ at $(UPV)$ and $T$ is the second intersection of circles $(UPV)$ and $(PAC)$, prove that $\angle PTM=90^o$.\\ \\
[i](Vlad Robu)[/i]
2014 Saudi Arabia Pre-TST, 3.1
There are $14$ students who have particiated to a $3$ hour test consisting on $15$ short problems. Each student has solved a different number of problems and each problem has been solved by a different number of students. Prove that there exists a student who has solved exactly $5$ problems.
2009 Postal Coaching, 2
Let $n \ge 4$ be an integer. Find the maximum value of the area of a $n$-gon which is inscribed in the circle of radius $1$ and has two perpendicular diagonals.
1999 AMC 12/AHSME, 14
Four girls — Mary, Alina, Tina, and Hanna — sang songs in a concert as trios, with one girl sitting out each time. Hanna sang $ 7$ songs, which was more than any other girl, and Mary sang $ 4$ songs, which was fewer than any other girl. How many songs did these trios sing?
$ \textbf{(A)}\ 7 \qquad
\textbf{(B)}\ 8 \qquad
\textbf{(C)}\ 9 \qquad
\textbf{(D)}\ 10 \qquad
\textbf{(E)}\ 11$
2012 Purple Comet Problems, 9
Points $E$ and $F$ lie inside rectangle $ABCD$ with $AE=DE=BF=CF=EF$. If $AB=11$ and $BC=8$, find the area of the quadrilateral $AEFB$.
1996 Baltic Way, 18
The jury of an Olympiad has $30$ members in the beginning. Each member of the jury thinks that some of his colleagues are competent, while all the others are not, and these opinions do not change. At the beginning of every session a voting takes place, and those members who are not competent in the opinion of more than one half of the voters are excluded from the jury for the rest of the olympiad. Prove that after at most $15$ sessions there will be no more exclusions. (Note that nobody votes about his own competence.)
2015 VJIMC, 2
[b]Problem 2[/b]
Determine all pairs $(n, m)$ of positive integers satisfying the equation
$$5^n = 6m^2 + 1\ . $$
2012 NIMO Problems, 3
In chess, there are two types of minor pieces, the bishop and the knight. A bishop may move along a diagonal, as long as there are no pieces obstructing its path. A knight may jump to any lattice square $\sqrt{5}$ away as long as it isn't occupied.
One day, a bishop and a knight were on squares in the same row of an infinite chessboard, when a huge meteor storm occurred, placing a meteor in each square on the chessboard independently and randomly with probability $p$. Neither the bishop nor the knight were hit, but their movement may have been obstructed by the meteors.
The value of $p$ that would make the expected number of valid squares that the bishop can move to and the number of squares that the knight can move to equal can be expressed as $\frac{a}{b}$ for relatively prime positive integers $a, b$. Compute $100a + b$.
[i]Proposed by Lewis Chen[/i]
2023 Francophone Mathematical Olympiad, 2
On her blackboard, Alice has written $n$ integers strictly greater than $1$. Then, she can, as often as she likes, erase two numbers $a$ and $b$ such that $a \neq b$, and replace them with $q$ and $q^2$, where $q$ is the product of the prime factors of $ab$ (each prime factor is counted only once). For instance, if Alice erases the numbers $4$ and $6$, the prime factors of $ab = 2^3 \times 3$ and $2$ and $3$, and Alice writes $q = 6$ and $q^2 =36$.
Prove that, after some time, and whatever Alice's strategy is, the list of numbers written on the blackboard will never change anymore.
[i]Note: The order of the numbers of the list is not important.[/i]
EMCC Accuracy Rounds, 2018
[b]p1.[/b] On SeaBay, green herring costs $\$2.50$ per pound, blue herring costs $\$4.00$ per pound, and red herring costs $\$5,85$ per pound. What must Farmer James pay for $12$ pounds of green herring and $7$ pounds of blue herring, in dollars?
[b]p2.[/b] A triangle has side lengths $3$, $4$, and $6$. A second triangle, similar to the first one, has one side of length $12$. Find the sum of all possible lengths of the second triangle's longest side.
[b]p3.[/b] Hen Hao runs two laps around a track. Her overall average speed for the two laps was $20\%$ slower than her average speed for just the first lap. What is the ratio of Hen Hao's average speed in the first lap to her average speed in the second lap?
[b]p4.[/b] Square $ABCD$ has side length $2$. Circle $\omega$ is centered at $A$ with radius $2$, and intersects line $AD$ at distinct points $D$ and $E$. Let $X$ be the intersection of segments $EC$ and $AB$, and let $Y$ be the intersection of the minor arc $DB$ with segment $EC$. Compute the length of $XY$ .
[b]p5.[/b] Hen Hao rolls $4$ tetrahedral dice with faces labeled $1$, $2$, $3$, and $4$, and adds up the numbers on the faces facing down. Find the probability that she ends up with a sum that is a perfect square.
[b]p6.[/b] Let $N \ge 11$ be a positive integer. In the Eggs-Eater Lottery, Farmer James needs to choose an (unordered) group of six different integers from $1$ to $N$, inclusive. Later, during the live drawing, another group of six numbers from $1$ to $N$ will be randomly chosen as winning numbers. Farmer James notices that the probability he will choose exactly zero winning numbers is the same as the probability that he will choose exactly one winning number. What must be the value of $N$?
[b]p7.[/b] An egg plant is a hollow cylinder of negligible thickness with radius $2$ and height $h$. Inside the egg plant, there is enough space for four solid spherical eggs of radius $1$. What is the minimum possible value for $h$?
[b]p8.[/b] Let $a_1, a_2, a_3, ...$ be a geometric sequence of positive reals such that $a_1 < 1$ and $(a_{20})^{20} = (a_{18})^{18}$. What is the smallest positive integer n such that the product $a_1a_2a_3...a_n$ is greater than $1$?
[b]p9.[/b] In parallelogram $ABCD$, the angle bisector of $\angle DAB$ meets segment $BC$ at $E$, and $AE$ and $BD$ intersect at $P$. Given that $AB = 9$, $AE = 16$, and $EP = EC$, find $BC$.
[b]p10.[/b] Farmer James places the numbers $1, 2,..., 9$ in a $3\times 3$ grid such that each number appears exactly once in the grid. Let $x_i$ be the product of the numbers in row $i$, and $y_i$ be the product of the numbers in column $i$. Given that the unordered sets $\{x_1, x_2, x_3\}$ and $\{y_1, y_2, y_3\}$ are the same, how many possible arrangements could Farmer James have made?
PS. You should use hide for answers. Collected [url=https://artofproblemsolving.com/community/c5h2760506p24143309]here[/url].
2014 Online Math Open Problems, 1
Carl has a rectangle whose side lengths are positive integers. This rectangle has the property that when he increases the width by 1 unit and decreases the length by 1 unit, the area increases by $x$ square units. What is the smallest possible positive value of $x$?
[i]Proposed by Ray Li[/i]
1991 Bulgaria National Olympiad, Problem 2
Let $K$ be a cube with edge $n$, where $n>2$ is an even integer. Cube $K$ is divided into $n^3$ unit cubes. We call any set of $n^2$ unit cubes lying on the same horizontal or vertical level a layer. We dispose of $\frac{n^3}4$ colors, in each of which we paint exactly $4$ unit cubes. Prove that we can always select $n$ unit cubes of distinct colors, no two of which lie on the same layer.
2022-2023 OMMC, 21
Define the minimum real $C$ where for any reals $0 = a_0 < a_{1} < \dots < a_{1000}$ then $$\min_{0 \le k \le 1000} (a_{k}^2 + (1000-k)^2) \le C(a_1+ \dots + a_{1000})$$ holds. Find $\lfloor 100C \rfloor.$
LMT Accuracy Rounds, 2023 S9
Evin’s calculator is broken and can only perform $3$ operations:
Operation $1$: Given a number $x$, output $2x$.
Operation $2$: Given a number $x$, output $4x +1$.
Operation $3$: Given a number $x$, output $8x +3$.
After initially given the number $0$, how many numbers at most $128$ can he make?
2009 Purple Comet Problems, 3
In the diagram $ABCDEFG$ is a regular heptagon (a $7$ sided polygon). Shown is the star $AEBFCGD$. The degree measure of the obtuse angle formed by $AE$ and $CG$ is $\dfrac{m}{n}$ where m and n are relatively prime positive integers. Find $m + n$.
[asy]
size(150);
defaultpen(linewidth(1));
string lab[]={"A","B","C","D","E","F","G"};
real r = 360/7;
pair A=dir(90-r),B=dir(90),C=dir(90+r),D=dir(90+2*r),E=dir(90+3*r),F=dir(90+4*r),G=dir(90+5*r);
draw(A--E--B--F--C--G--D--cycle);
for(int k = -1;k <= 5;++k) {
label("$"+lab[k+1]+"$",dir(90+k*r),dir(90+k*r));
}
[/asy]
1999 All-Russian Olympiad Regional Round, 9.7
Prove that every natural number is the difference of two natural numbers that have the same number of prime factors. (Each prime divisor is counted once, for example, the number $12$ has two prime factors: $2$ and $3$.)
2013 Math Prize for Girls Olympiad, 4
We are given a finite set of segments of the same line. Prove that we can color each segment red or blue such that, for each point $p$ on the line, the number of red segments containing $p$ differs from the number of blue segments containing $p$ by at most $1$.
1986 Canada National Olympiad, 5
Let $u_1$, $u_2$, $u_3$, $\dots$ be a sequence of integers satisfying the recurrence relation $u_{n + 2} = u_{n + 1}^2 - u_n$. Suppose $u_1 = 39$ and $u_2 = 45$. Prove that 1986 divides infinitely many terms of the sequence.
1990 AMC 12/AHSME, 20
$ABCD$ is a quadrilateral with right angles at $A$ and $C$. Points $E$ and $F$ are on $AC$, and $DE$ and $BF$ are perpendicular to $AC$. If $AE=3$, $DE=5$, and $CE=7$, then $BF=$
[asy]
draw((0,0)--(10,0)--(3,-5)--(0,0)--(6.5,3)--(10,0));
draw((6.5,0)--(6.5,3));
draw((3,0)--(3,-5));
dot((0,0));
dot((10,0));
dot((3,0));
dot((3,-5));
dot((6.5,0));
dot((6.5,3));
label("A", (0,0), W);
label("B", (6.5,3), N);
label("C", (10,0), E);
label("D", (3,-5), S);
label("E", (3,0), N);
label("F", (6.5,0), S);[/asy]
$\text{(A)} \ 3.6 \qquad \text{(B)} \ 4 \qquad \text{(C)} \ 4.2 \qquad \text{(D)} \ 4.5 \qquad \text{(E)} \ 5$
1998 All-Russian Olympiad Regional Round, 9.1
The lengths of the sides of a certain triangle and the diameter of the inscribed part circles are four consecutive terms of arithmetic progression. Find all such triangles.
2024 IFYM, Sozopol, 5
Find all functions \(f:\mathbb{R}^{+} \to \mathbb{R}^{+}\) such that
\[
f(x) > x \ \ \text{and} \ \ f(x-y+xy+f(y)) = f(x+y) + xf(y)
\]
for arbitrary positive real numbers \(x\) and \(y\).
2014 Taiwan TST Round 3, 1
In convex hexagon $ABCDEF$, $AB \parallel DE$, $BC \parallel EF$, $CD \parallel FA$, and \[ AB+DE = BC+EF = CD+FA. \] The midpoints of sides $AB$, $BC$, $DE$, $EF$ are $A_1$, $B_1$, $D_1$, $E_1$, and segments $A_1D_1$ and $B_1E_1$ meet at $O$. Prove that $\angle D_1OE_1 = \frac12 \angle DEF$.
2024 Nepal TST, P4
Vlad draws 100 rays in the Euclidean plane. David then draws a line $\ell$ and pays Vlad one pound for each ray that $\ell$ intersects. Naturally, David wants to pay as little as possible. What is the largest amount of money that Vlad can get from David?
[i]Proposed by Vlad Spătaru[/i]
1994 China Team Selection Test, 2
Given distinct prime numbers $p$ and $q$ and a natural number $n \geq 3$, find all $a \in \mathbb{Z}$ such that the polynomial $f(x) = x^n + ax^{n-1} + pq$ can be factored into 2 integral polynomials of degree at least 1.