Found problems: 25757
MMPC Part II 1958 - 95, 1995
[b]p1.[/b] (a) Brian has a big job to do that will take him two hours to complete. He has six friends who can help him. They all work at the same rate, somewhat slower than Brian. All seven working together can finish the job in $45$ minutes. How long will it take to do the job if Brian worked with only three of his friends?
(b) Brian could do his next job in $N$ hours, working alone. This time he has an unlimited list of friends who can help him, but as he moves down the list, each friend works more slowly than those above on the list. The first friend would take $kN$ ($k > 1$) hours to do the job alone, the second friend would take $k^2N$ hours alone, the third friend would take $k^3N$ hours alone, etc. Theoretically, if Brian could get all his infinite number of friends to help him, how long would it take to complete the job?
[b]p2.[/b] (a) The centers of two circles of radius $1$ are two opposite vertices of a square of side $1$. Find the area of the intersection of the two circles.
(b) The centers of two circles of radius $1$ are two consecutive vertices of a square of side $1$. Find the area of the intersection of the two circles and the square.
(c) The centers of four circles of radius $1$ are the vertices of a square of side $1$. Find the area of the intersection of the four circles.
[b]p3.[/b] For any real number$ x$, $[x]$ denotes the greatest integer that does not exceed $x$. For example, $[7.3] = 7$, $[10/3] = 3$, $[5] = 5$. Given natural number $N$, denote as $f(N)$ the following sum of $N$ integers:
$$f(N) = [N/1] + [N/2] + [N/3] + ... + [N/n].$$
(a) Evaluate $f(7) - f(6)$.
(b) Evaluate $f(35) - f(34)$.
(c) Evaluate (with explanation) $f(1996) - f(1995)$.
[b]p4.[/b] We will say that triangle $ABC$ is good if it satisfies the following conditions: $AB = 7$, the other two sides are integers, and $\cos A =\frac27$.
(a) Find the sides of a good isosceles triangle.
(b) Find the sides of a good scalene (i.e. non-isosceles) triangle.
(c) Find the sides of a good scalene triangle other than the one you found in (b) and prove that any good triangle is congruent to one of the three triangles you have found.
[b]p5.[/b] (a) A bag contains nine balls, some of which are white, the others are black. Two balls are drawn at random from the bag, without replacement. It is found that the probability that the two balls are of the same color is the same as the probability that they are of different colors. How many of the nine balls were of one color and how many of the other color?
(b) A bag contains $N$ balls, some of which are white, the others are black. Two balls are drawn at random from the bag, without replacement. It is found that the probability that the two balls are of the same color is the same as the probability that they are of different colors. It is also found that $180 < N < 220$. Find the exact value of $N$ and determine how many of the $N$ balls were of one color and how many of the other color.
PS. You should use hide for answers. Collected [url=https://artofproblemsolving.com/community/c5h2760506p24143309]here[/url].
2010 Romania National Olympiad, 2
Let $ABCD$ be a rectangle of centre $O$, such that $\angle DAC=60^{\circ}$. The angle bisector of $\angle DAC$ meets $DC$ at $S$. Lines $OS$ and $AD$ meet at $L$, and lines $BL$ and $AC$ meet at $M$. Prove that lines $SM$ and $CL$ are parallel.
Kyiv City MO 1984-93 - geometry, 1984.10.5
The vertices of a regular hexagon $A_1,A_2,...,A_6$ lie respectively on the sides $B_1B_2$, $B_2B_3$, $B_3B_4$, $B_4B_5$, $B_5B_6$, $B_6B_1$ of a convex hexagon $B_1B_2B_3B_4B_5B_6$. Prove that
$$S_{B_1B_2B_3B_4B_5B_6} \le \frac32 S_{A_1A_2A_3A_4A_5A_6}.$$
1979 IMO Longlists, 71
Two circles in a plane intersect. $A$ is one of the points of intersection. Starting simultaneously from $A$ two points move with constant speed, each travelling along its own circle in the same sense. The two points return to $A$ simultaneously after one revolution. Prove that there is a fixed point $P$ in the plane such that the two points are always equidistant from $P.$
1991 Bundeswettbewerb Mathematik, 3
In a plane with a square grid, where the side length of the base square is $1$, lies a right triangle. All its vertices are lattice points and all side lengths are integer. Prove that the center of the incircle is also a lattice point.
2004 AMC 10, 19
A white cylindrical silo has a diameter of 30 feet and a height of 80 feet. A red stripe with a horizontal width of 3 feet is painted on the silo, as shown, making two complete revolutions around it. What is the area of the stripe in square feet?
[asy]
size(250);defaultpen(linewidth(0.8));
draw(ellipse(origin, 3, 1));
fill((3,0)--(3,2)--(-3,2)--(-3,0)--cycle, white);
draw((3,0)--(3,16)^^(-3,0)--(-3,16));
draw((0, 15)--(3, 12)^^(0, 16)--(3, 13));
filldraw(ellipse((0, 16), 3, 1), white, black);
draw((-3,11)--(3, 5)^^(-3,10)--(3, 4));
draw((-3,2)--(0,-1)^^(-3,1)--(-1,-0.89));
draw((0,-1)--(0,15), dashed);
draw((3,-2)--(3,-4)^^(-3,-2)--(-3,-4));
draw((-7,0)--(-5,0)^^(-7,16)--(-5,16));
draw((3,-3)--(-3,-3), Arrows(6));
draw((-6,0)--(-6,16), Arrows(6));
draw((-2,9)--(-1,9), Arrows(3));
label("$3$", (-1.375,9.05), dir(260), fontsize(7));
label("$A$", (0,15), N);
label("$B$", (0,-1), NE);
label("$30$", (0, -3), S);
label("$80$", (-6, 8), W);[/asy]
$ \textbf{(A)}\; 120\qquad
\textbf{(B)}\; 180\qquad
\textbf{(C)}\; 240\qquad
\textbf{(D)}\; 360\qquad
\textbf{(E)}\; 480$
VII Soros Olympiad 2000 - 01, 10.8
There is a set of triangles, in each of which the smallest angle does not exceed $36^o$ . A new one is formed from these triangles according to the following rule: the smallest side of the new one is equal to the sum of the smallest sides of these triangles, its middle side is equal to the sum of the middle sides, and the largest is the sum of the largest ones. Prove that the sine of the smallest angle of the resulting triangle is less than $2 \sin 18^o$ .
2003 IMO Shortlist, 2
Three distinct points $A$, $B$, and $C$ are fixed on a line in this order. Let $\Gamma$ be a circle passing through $A$ and $C$ whose center does not lie on the line $AC$. Denote by $P$ the intersection of the tangents to $\Gamma$ at $A$ and $C$. Suppose $\Gamma$ meets the segment $PB$ at $Q$. Prove that the intersection of the bisector of $\angle AQC$ and the line $AC$ does not depend on the choice of $\Gamma$.
2011 Saudi Arabia BMO TST, 1
Let $ABCD$ be a square of center $O$. The parallel to $AD$ through $O$ intersects $AB$ and $CD$ at $M$ and $N$ and a parallel to $AB$ intersects diagonal $AC$ at $P$. Prove that $$OP^4 + \left(\frac{MN}{2} \right)^4 = MP^2 \cdot NP^2$$
1999 Bundeswettbewerb Mathematik, 4
It is known that there are polyhedrons whose faces are more numbered than the vertices. Find the smallest number of triangular faces that such a polyhedron can have.
2003 Mid-Michigan MO, 10-12
[b]p1.[/b] The length of the first side of a triangle is $1$, the length of the second side is $11$, and the length of the third side is an integer. Find that integer.
[b]p2.[/b] Suppose $a, b$, and $c$ are positive numbers such that $a + b + c = 1$. Prove that $ab + ac + bc \le \frac13$.
[b]p3.[/b] Prove that $1 +\frac12+\frac13+\frac14+ ... +\frac{1}{100}$ is not an integer.
[b]p4.[/b] Find all of the four-digit numbers n such that the last four digits of $n^2$ coincide with the digits of $n$.
[b]p5.[/b] (Bonus) Several ants are crawling along a circle with equal constant velocities (not necessarily in the same direction). If two ants collide, both immediately reverse direction and crawl with the same velocity. Prove that, no matter how many ants and what their initial positions are, they will, at some time, all simultaneously return to the initial positions.
PS. You should use hide for answers. Collected [url=https://artofproblemsolving.com/community/c5h2760506p24143309]here[/url].
Novosibirsk Oral Geo Oly VII, 2022.4
Fold the next seven corners into a rectangle.
[img]https://cdn.artofproblemsolving.com/attachments/b/b/2b8b9d6d4b72024996a66d41f865afb91bb9b7.png[/img]
2022 Czech-Polish-Slovak Junior Match, 3
The points $D, E, F$ lie respectively on the sides $BC$, $CA$, $AB$ of the triangle ABC such that $F B = BD$, $DC = CE$, and the lines $EF$ and $BC$ are parallel. Tangent to the circumscribed circle of triangle $DEF$ at point $F$ intersects line $AD$ at point $P$. Perpendicular bisector of segment $EF$ intersects the segment $AC$ at $Q$. Prove that the lines $P Q$ and $BC$ are parallel.
2021 Novosibirsk Oral Olympiad in Geometry, 6
Inside the equilateral triangle $ABC$, points $P$ and $Q$ are chosen so that the quadrilateral $APQC$ is convex, $AP = PQ = QC$ and $\angle PBQ = 30^o$. Prove that $AQ = BP$.
2002 Vietnam Team Selection Test, 1
Find all triangles $ABC$ for which $\angle ACB$ is acute and the interior angle bisector of $BC$ intersects the trisectors $(AX, (AY$ of the angle $\angle BAC$ in the points $N,P$ respectively, such that $AB=NP=2DM$, where $D$ is the foot of the altitude from $A$ on $BC$ and $M$ is the midpoint of the side $BC$.
1996 French Mathematical Olympiad, Problem 3
(a) Let there be given a rectangular parallelepiped. Show that some four of its vertices determine a tetrahedron whose all faces are right triangles.
(b) Conversely, prove that every tetrahedron whose all faces are right triangles can be obtained by selecting four vertices of a rectangular parallelepiped.
(c) Now investigate such tetrahedra which also have at least two isosceles faces. Given the length $a$ of the shortest edge, compute the lengths of the other edges.
2016 PUMaC Individual Finals A, 3
On a cyclic quadrilateral $ABCD$, $M$ is the midpoint of $AB$ and $N$ is the midpoint of $CD$. Let $E$ be the projection of $C$ onto $AB$ and $F$ the reflection of $N$ about the midpoint of $DE$. If $F$ is inside quadrilateral $ABCD$, show that $\angle BMF = \angle CBD$.
1998 AIME Problems, 3
The graph of $y^2+2xy+40|x|=400$ partitions the plane into several regions. What is the area of the bounded region?
2007 F = Ma, 21
If the rotational inertia of a sphere about an axis through the center of the sphere is $I$, what is the rotational inertia of another sphere that has the same density, but has twice the radius?
$ \textbf{(A)}\ 2I \qquad\textbf{(B)}\ 4I \qquad\textbf{(C)}\ 8I\qquad\textbf{(D)}\ 16I\qquad\textbf{(E)}\ 32I $
2024 Korea Summer Program Practice Test, 5
Let $ABCD$ be a convex quadrilateral such that $\angle A, \angle B, \angle C$ are acute. $AB$ and $CD$ meet at $E$ and $BC,DA$ meet at $F$. Let $K,L,M,N$ be the midpoints of $AB,BC,CD,DA$ repectively. $KM$ meets $BC,DA$ at $X$ and $Y$, and $LN$ meets $AB,CD$ at $Z$ and $W$. Prove that the line passing $E$ and the midpoint of $ZW$ is parallel to the line passing $F$ and the midpoint of $XY$.
1981 Polish MO Finals, 1
Two intersecting lines $a$ and $b$ are given in a plane. Consider all pairs of orthogonal planes $\alpha$, $\beta$ such that $a \subset \alpha$ and $b\subset \beta$. Prove that there is a circle such that every its point lies on the line $\alpha \cap \beta$ for some $\alpha$ and $\beta$.
2024 Belarusian National Olympiad, 11.8
Projector emits rays in space. Consider all acute angles between the rays. It is known that no matter what ray we remove, the number of acute angles decreases by exactly $2$
What is the maximal number of rays the projector can emit?
[i]M. Karpuk, E. Barabanov[/i]
JOM 2023, 3
Given an acute triangle $ABC$ with $AB<AC$, let $D$ be the foot of altitude from $A$ to $BC$ and let $M\neq D$ be a point on segment $BC$.$\,J$ and $K$ lie on $AC$ and $AB$ respectively such that $K,J,M$ lies on a common line perpendicular to $BC$. Let the circumcircles of $\triangle ABJ$ and $\triangle ACK$ intersect at $O$. Prove that $J,O,M$ are collinear if and only if $M$ is the midpoint of $BC$.
[i]Proposed by Wong Jer Ren[/i]
2014 Harvard-MIT Mathematics Tournament, 9
Two circles are said to be [i]orthogonal[/i] if they intersect in two points, and their tangents at either point of intersection are perpendicular. Two circles $\omega_1$ and $\omega_2$ with radii $10$ and $13$, respectively, are externally tangent at point $P$. Another circle $\omega_3$ with radius $2\sqrt2$ passes through $P$ and is orthogonal to both $\omega_1$ and $\omega_2$. A fourth circle $\omega_4$, orthogonal to $\omega_3$, is externally tangent to $\omega_1$ and $\omega_2$. Compute the radius of $\omega_4$.
2016 Saudi Arabia IMO TST, 3
Given two circles $(O_1)$ and $(O_2)$ intersect at $A$ and $B$. Let $d_1$ and $d_2$ be two lines through $A$ and be symmetric with respect to $AB$. The line $d_1$ cuts $(O_1)$ and $(O_2)$ at $G, E$ ($\ne A$), respectively, the line $d_2$ cuts $(O_1)$ and $(O_2)$ at $F, H$ ($\ne A$), respectively, such that $E$ is between $A, G$ and $F$ is between $A, H$. Let $J$ be the intersection of $EH$ and $FG$. The line $BJ$ cuts $(O_1), (O_2)$ at $K, L$ ($\ne B$), respectively. Let $N$ be the intersection of $O_1K$ and $O_2L$. Prove that the circle $(NLK)$ is tangent to $AB$.