Found problems: 85335
2017 Brazil Team Selection Test, 1
Let $n$ be a positive integer relatively prime to $6$. We paint the vertices of a regular $n$-gon with three colours so that there is an odd number of vertices of each colour. Show that there exists an isosceles triangle whose three vertices are of different colours.
1992 AMC 8, 6
Suppose that
[asy]
unitsize(18);
draw((0,0)--(2,0)--(1,sqrt(3))--cycle);
label("$a$",(1,sqrt(3)-0.2),S);
label("$b$",(sqrt(3)/10,0.1),ENE);
label("$c$",(2-sqrt(3)/10,0.1),WNW);
[/asy]
means $a+b-c$.
For example,
[asy]
unitsize(18);
draw((0,0)--(2,0)--(1,sqrt(3))--cycle);
label("$5$",(1,sqrt(3)-0.2),S);
label("$4$",(sqrt(3)/10,0.1),ENE);
label("$6$",(2-sqrt(3)/10,0.1),WNW);
[/asy]
is $5+4-6 = 3$.
Then the sum
[asy]
unitsize(18);
draw((0,0)--(2,0)--(1,sqrt(3))--cycle);
label("$1$",(1,sqrt(3)-0.2),S);
label("$3$",(sqrt(3)/10,0.1),ENE);
label("$4$",(2-sqrt(3)/10,0.1),WNW);
draw((3,0)--(5,0)--(4,sqrt(3))--cycle);
label("$2$",(4,sqrt(3)-0.2),S);
label("$5$",(3+sqrt(3)/10,0.1),ENE);
label("$6$",(5-sqrt(3)/10,0.1),WNW);
label("$+$",(2.5,-0.1),N);
[/asy]
is
$\text{(A)}\ -2 \qquad \text{(B)}\ -1 \qquad \text{(C)}\ 0 \qquad \text{(D)}\ 1 \qquad \text{(E)}\ 2$
1999 National Olympiad First Round, 33
$ \left|AC\right| \equal{} 8 \sqrt {2}$, $ B$ is the midpoint of $ \left[AC\right]$, $ E$ is the midpoint of arc $ AB$ of a circle having chord $ \left[AB\right]$, and $ D$ is the point of tangency drawing from $ C$.($ D$ lies on the opposite side of line $ AB$ to $ E$). If $ \left[DE\right]\bigcap \left[AB\right] \equal{} \left\{F\right\}$, $ \left|CF\right| \equal{} ?$
$\textbf{(A)}\ 5\sqrt {2} \qquad\textbf{(B)}\ 4\sqrt {2} \qquad\textbf{(C)}\ 8 \qquad\textbf{(D)}\ 6 \qquad\textbf{(E)}\ 4\sqrt {3}$
2010 Thailand Mathematical Olympiad, 1
Find the number of ways to distribute $11$ balls into $5$ boxes with different sizes, so that each box receives at least one ball, and the total number of balls in the largest and smallest boxes is more than the total number of balls in the remaining boxes.
PEN G Problems, 28
Do there exist real numbers $a$ and $b$ such that [list=a][*] $a+b$ is rational and $a^n +b^n $ is irrational for all $n \in \mathbb{N}$ with $n \ge 2$? [*] $a+b$ is irrational and $a^n +b^n $ is rational for all $n \in \mathbb{N}$ with $n \ge 2$?[/list]
2003 Tournament Of Towns, 4
There are $N$ points on the plane; no three of them belong to the same straight line. Every pair of points is connected by a segment. Some of these segments are colored in red and the rest of them in blue. The red segments form a closed broken line without self-intersections(each red segment having only common endpoints with its two neighbors and no other common points with the other segments), and so do the blue segments. Find all possible values of $N$ for which such a disposition of $N$ points and such a choice of red and blue segments are possible.
2023 New Zealand MO, 2
Let $a, b$ and $c$ be positive real numbers such that $a+b+c = abc$. Prove that at least one of $a, b$ or $c$ is greater than $\frac{17}{10}$ .
2012 Today's Calculation Of Integral, 820
Let $P_k$ be a point whose $x$-coordinate is $1+\frac{k}{n}\ (k=1,\ 2,\ \cdots,\ n)$ on the curve $y=\ln x$. For $A(1,\ 0)$, find the limit $\lim_{n\to\infty} \frac{1}{n}\sum_{k=1}^{n} \overline{AP_k}^2.$
1998 Miklós Schweitzer, 2
For any polynomial f, denote by $P_f$ the number of integers n for which f(n) is a (positive) prime number. Let $q_d = max P_f$ , where f runs over all polynomials with integer coefficients with degree d and reducible over $\mathbb{Q}$. Prove that $\forall d\geq 2$ , $q_d = d$.
1998 ITAMO, 4
Let $ABCD$ be a trapezoid with the longer base $AB$ such that its diagonals $AC$ and $BD$ are perpendicular. Let $O$ be the circumcenter of the triangle $ABC$ and $E$ be the intersection of the lines $OB$ and $CD$. Prove that $BC^2 = CD \cdot CE$.
2024 Malaysia IMONST 2, 2
Jia Herng has a circle $\omega$ with center $O$, and $P$ is a point outside of $\omega$. Let $PX$ and $PY$ are two lines tangent to $\omega$ at $X$ and $Y$ , and $Q$ is a point on segment $PX$. Let $R$ is a point on the ray $PY$ beyond $Y$ such that $QX = RY$.
Help Jia Herng prove that the points $O$, $P$, $Q$, $R$ are concyclic.
1957 AMC 12/AHSME, 13
A rational number between $ \sqrt{2}$ and $ \sqrt{3}$ is:
$ \textbf{(A)}\ \frac{\sqrt{2} \plus{} \sqrt{3}}{2} \qquad
\textbf{(B)}\ \frac{\sqrt{2} \cdot \sqrt{3}}{2}\qquad
\textbf{(C)}\ 1.5\qquad
\textbf{(D)}\ 1.8\qquad
\textbf{(E)}\ 1.4$
2018 China Northern MO, 3
$A,B,C,D,E$ lie on $\odot O$ in that order,and $$BD \cap CE=F,CE \cap AD=G,AD \cap BE=H,BE \cap AC=I,AC \cap BD=J.$$ Prove that $\frac{FG}{CE}=\frac{GH}{DA}=\frac{HI}{BE}=\frac{IJ}{AC}=\frac{JF}{BD}$ when and only when $F,G,H,I,J$ are concyclic.
1998 Harvard-MIT Mathematics Tournament, 10
G. H. Hardy once went to visit Srinivasa Ramanujan in the hospital, and he started the conversation with: “I came here in taxi-cab number $1729$. That number seems dull to me, which I hope isn’t a bad omen.” “Nonsense,” said Ramanujan. “The number isn’t dull at all. It’s quite interesting. It’s the smallest number that can be expressed as the sum of two cubes in two different ways.” Ramujan had immediately seen that $1729=12^3+1^3=10^3+9^3$. What is the smallest positive integer representable as the sum of the cubes of [i]three[/i] positive integers in two different ways?
1969 IMO Longlists, 52
Prove that a regular polygon with an odd number of edges cannot be partitioned into four pieces with equal areas by two lines that pass through the center of polygon.
1978 Austrian-Polish Competition, 1
Determine all functions $f:(0;\infty)\to \mathbb{R}$ that satisfy
$$f(x+y)=f(x^2+y^2)\quad \forall x,y\in (0;\infty)$$
2013 Middle European Mathematical Olympiad, 6
Let $K$ be a point inside an acute triangle $ ABC $, such that $ BC $ is a common tangent of the circumcircles of $ AKB $ and $ AKC$. Let $ D $ be the intersection of the lines $ CK $ and $ AB $, and let $ E $ be the intersection of the lines $ BK $ and $ AC $ . Let $ F $ be the intersection of the line $BC$ and the perpendicular bisector of the segment $DE$. The circumcircle of $ABC$ and the circle $k$ with centre $ F$ and radius $FD$ intersect at points $P$ and $Q$.
Prove that the segment $PQ$ is a diameter of $k$.
1999 Akdeniz University MO, 2
Find all $(x,y)$ real numbers pairs such that,
$$x^7+y^7=x^4+y^4$$
2018 Bundeswettbewerb Mathematik, 4
Determine alle positive integers $n>1$ with the following property:
For each colouring of the lattice points in the plane with $n$ colours, there are three lattice points of the same colour forming an isosceles right triangle with legs parallel to the coordinate axes.
2015 NIMO Summer Contest, 3
A list of integers with average $89$ is split into two disjoint groups. The average of the integers in the first group is $73$ while the average of the integers in the second group is $111$. What is the smallest possible number of integers in the original list?
[i] Proposed by David Altizio [/i]
2007 Bulgarian Autumn Math Competition, Problem 10.2
Let $AC>BC$ in $\triangle ABC$ and $M$ and $N$ be the midpoints of $AC$ and $BC$ respectively. The angle bisector of $\angle B$ intersects $\overline{MN}$ at $P$. The incircle of $\triangle ABC$ has center $I$ and touches $BC$ at $Q$. The perpendiculars from $P$ and $Q$ to $MN$ and $BC$ respectively intersect at $R$. Let $S=AB\cap RN$.
a) Prove that $PCQI$ is cyclic
b) Express the length of the segment $BS$ with $a$, $b$, $c$ - the side lengths of $\triangle ABC$ .
2017 IMO Shortlist, G6
Let $n\ge3$ be an integer. Two regular $n$-gons $\mathcal{A}$ and $\mathcal{B}$ are given in the plane. Prove that the vertices of $\mathcal{A}$ that lie inside $\mathcal{B}$ or on its boundary are consecutive.
(That is, prove that there exists a line separating those vertices of $\mathcal{A}$ that lie inside $\mathcal{B}$ or on its boundary from the other vertices of $\mathcal{A}$.)
1999 German National Olympiad, 5
Consider the following inequality for real numbers $x,y,z$: $|x-y|+|y-z|+|z-x| \le a \sqrt{x^2 +y^2 +z^2}$ .
(a) Prove that the inequality is valid for $a = 2\sqrt2$
(b) Assuming that $x,y,z$ are nonnegative, show that the inequality is also valid for $a = 2$.
2002 Greece JBMO TST, 2
Let $A$ be a $3$-digit positive integer and $B$ be the positive integer that comes from $A$ be replacing with each other the digits of hundreds with the digit of the units. It is also given that $B$ is a $3$-digit number.
Find numbers $A$ and $B$ if it is known that $A$ divided by $B$ gives quotient $3$ and remainder equal to seven times the sum of it's digits.
Kyiv City MO 1984-93 - geometry, 1993.10.4
Prove theat for an arbitrary triangle holds the inequality $$a \cos A+ b \cos B + c \cos C \le p ,$$ where $a, b, c$ are the sides of the triangle, $A, B, C$ are the angles, $p$ is the semiperimeter.