Found problems: 242
1990 National High School Mathematics League, 15
In pyramid $M-ABCD$, bottom surface $ABCD$ is a square. $MA=MC,MA\perp AB$. If the area of $\triangle AMD$ is $1$, find the maximum value of radius of sphere that can be put inside the pyramid.
2014 Sharygin Geometry Olympiad, 24
A circumscribed pyramid $ABCDS$ is given. The opposite sidelines of its base meet at points $P$ and $Q$ in such a way that $A$ and $B$ lie on segments $PD$ and $PC$ respectively. The inscribed sphere touches faces $ABS$ and $BCS$ at points $K$ and $L$. Prove that if $PK$ and $QL$ are complanar then the touching point of the sphere with the base lies on $BD$.
1999 Croatia National Olympiad, Problem 2
The base of a pyramid $ABCDV$ is a rectangle $ABCD$ with the sides $AB=a$ and $BC=b$, and all lateral edges of the pyramid have length $c$. Find the area of the intersection of the pyramid with a plane that contains the diagonal $BD$ and is parallel to $VA$.
1951 Moscow Mathematical Olympiad, 203
A sphere is inscribed in an $n$-angled pyramid. Prove that if we align all side faces of the pyramid with the base plane, flipping them around the corresponding edges of the base, then
(1) all tangent points of these faces to the sphere would coincide with one point, $H$, and
(2) the vertices of the faces would lie on a circle centered at $H$.
1989 National High School Mathematics League, 14
In regular triangular pyramid $S-ABC$, hieght $SO=3$, length of sides of bottom surface is $6$. Projection of $A$ on plane $SBC$ is $O'$. $P\in AO',\frac{AP}{PO'}=8$. Draw a plane
parallel to plane $ABC$ and passes $P$. Find the area of the cross section.
2018 AMC 8, 19
In a sign pyramid a cell gets a "+" if the two cells below it have the same sign, and it gets a "-" if the two cells below it have different signs. The diagram below illustrates a sign pyramid with four levels. How many possible ways are there to fill the four cells in the bottom row to produce a "+" at the top of the pyramid?
[asy]
unitsize(2cm);
path box = (-0.5,-0.2)--(-0.5,0.2)--(0.5,0.2)--(0.5,-0.2)--cycle;
draw(box); label("$+$",(0,0));
draw(shift(1,0)*box); label("$-$",(1,0));
draw(shift(2,0)*box); label("$+$",(2,0));
draw(shift(3,0)*box); label("$-$",(3,0));
draw(shift(0.5,0.4)*box); label("$-$",(0.5,0.4));
draw(shift(1.5,0.4)*box); label("$-$",(1.5,0.4));
draw(shift(2.5,0.4)*box); label("$-$",(2.5,0.4));
draw(shift(1,0.8)*box); label("$+$",(1,0.8));
draw(shift(2,0.8)*box); label("$+$",(2,0.8));
draw(shift(1.5,1.2)*box); label("$+$",(1.5,1.2));
[/asy]
$\textbf{(A) } 2 \qquad \textbf{(B) } 4 \qquad \textbf{(C) } 8 \qquad \textbf{(D) } 12 \qquad \textbf{(E) } 16$
1995 National High School Mathematics League, 11
Color the vertexes of a quadrangular pyramid in one color, satisfying that two end points of any edge are in different colors. We have only 5 colors, then the number of ways coloring the quadrangular pyramid is________.
2011 AMC 12/AHSME, 15
The circular base of a hemisphere of radius $2$ rests on the base of a square pyramid of height $6$. The hemisphere is tangent to the other four faces of the pyramid. What is the edge-length of the base of the pyramid?
$ \textbf{(A)}\ 3\sqrt{2} \qquad
\textbf{(B)}\ \frac{13}{3} \qquad
\textbf{(C)}\ 4\sqrt{2} \qquad
\textbf{(D)}\ 6 \qquad
\textbf{(E)}\ \frac{13}{2}
$
2004 AMC 10, 7
A grocer stacks oranges in a pyramid-like stack whose rectangular base is $ 5$ oranges by $ 8$ oranges. Each orange above the first level rests in a pocket formed by four oranges in the level below. The stack is completed by a single row of oranges. How many oranges are in the stack?
$ \textbf{(A)}\ 96 \qquad
\textbf{(B)}\ 98 \qquad
\textbf{(C)}\ 100 \qquad
\textbf{(D)}\ 101 \qquad
\textbf{(E)}\ 134$
2019 Polish Junior MO First Round, 7
A cube $ABCDA'B'C'D'$ is given with an edge of length $2$ and vertices marked as in the figure. The point $K$ is center of the edge $AB$. The plane containing the points $B',D', K$ intersects the edge $AD$ at point $L$. Calculate the volume of the pyramid with apex $A$ and base the quadrilateral $D'B'KL$.
[img]https://cdn.artofproblemsolving.com/attachments/7/9/721989193ffd830fd7ad43bdde7e177c942c76.png[/img]
1994 Poland - First Round, 8
In a regular pyramid with a regular $n$-gon as a base, the dihedral angle between a lateral face and the base is equal to $\alpha$, and the angle between a lateral edge and the base is equal to $\beta$. Prove that
$sin^2 \alpha - sin^2 \beta \leq tg^2 \frac{\pi}{2n}$.
2012 Online Math Open Problems, 16
Let $A_1B_1C_1D_1A_2B_2C_2D_2$ be a unit cube, with $A_1B_1C_1D_1$ and $A_2B_2C_2D_2$ opposite square faces, and let $M$ be the center of face $A_2 B_2 C_2 D_2$. Rectangular pyramid $MA_1B_1C_1D_1$ is cut out of the cube. If the surface area of the remaining solid can be expressed in the form $a + \sqrt{b}$, where $a$ and $b$ are positive integers and $b$ is not divisible by the square of any prime, find $a+b$.
[i]Author: Alex Zhu[/i]
2016 Nigerian Senior MO Round 2, Problem 5
A solid pyramid $TABCD$, with a quadrilateral base $ABCD$ is to be coloured on each of the five faces such that no two faces with a common edge will have the same colour. If five different colours are available, what is the number of ways to colour the pyramid?
2016 District Olympiad, 1
Let be a pyramid having a square as its base and the projection of the top vertex to the base is the center of the square. Prove that two opposite faces are perpendicular if and only if the angle between two adjacent faces is $ 120^{\circ } . $
2014 PUMaC Combinatorics A, 3
You have three colors $\{\text{red}, \text{blue}, \text{green}\}$ with which you can color the faces of a regular octahedron (8 triangle sided polyhedron, which is two square based pyramids stuck together at their base), but you must do so in a way that avoids coloring adjacent pieces with the same color. How many different coloring schemes are possible? (Two coloring schemes are considered equivalent if one can be rotated to fit the other.)
2023 Durer Math Competition Finals, 4
For a given integer $n\geq2$, a pyramid of height $n$ if defined as a collection of $1^2+2^2+\dots+n^2$ stone cubes of equal size stacked in $n$ layers such that the cubes in the $k$-th layer form a square with sidelength $n+1-k$ and every cube (except for the ones in the bottom layer) rests on four cubes in the layer below. Some of the cubes are made of sandstone, some are made of granite. The top cube is made of granite, and to ensure the stability of the piramid, for each granite cube (except for the ones in the bottom layer), at least three out of four of the cubes supporting it have to be granite. What is the minimum possible number of granite cubes in such an arrangement?
2014 All-Russian Olympiad, 2
The sphere $ \omega $ passes through the vertex $S$ of the pyramid $SABC$ and intersects with the edges $SA,SB,SC$ at $A_1,B_1,C_1$ other than $S$. The sphere $ \Omega $ is the circumsphere of the pyramid $SABC$ and intersects with $ \omega $ circumferential, lies on a plane which parallel to the plane $(ABC)$.
Points $A_2,B_2,C_2$ are symmetry points of the points $A_1,B_1,C_1$ respect to midpoints of the edges $SA,SB,SC$ respectively. Prove that the points $A$, $B$, $C$, $A_2$, $B_2$, and $C_2$ lie on a sphere.
1988 Irish Math Olympiad, 1
A pyramid with a square base, and all its edges of length $2$, is joined to a regular tetrahedron, whose edges are also of length $2$, by gluing together two of the triangular faces. Find the sum of the lengths of the edges of the resulting solid.
2005 Oral Moscow Geometry Olympiad, 4
A sphere can be inscribed into a pyramid, the base of which is a parallelogram. Prove that the sums of the areas of its opposite side faces are equal.
(M. Volchkevich)
1978 Germany Team Selection Test, 5
Let $E$ be a finite set of points such that $E$ is not contained in a plane and no three points of $E$ are collinear. Show that at least one of the following alternatives holds:
(i) $E$ contains five points that are vertices of a convex pyramid having no other points in common with $E;$
(ii) some plane contains exactly three points from $E.$
2021 Sharygin Geometry Olympiad, 10-11.4
Can a triangle be a development of a quadrangular pyramid?
2014 Purple Comet Problems, 30
Three mutually tangent spheres each with radius $5$ sit on a horizontal plane. A triangular pyramid has a base that is an equilateral triangle with side length $6$, has three congruent isosceles triangles for vertical faces, and has height $12$. The base of the pyramid is parallel to the plane, and the vertex of the pyramid is pointing downward so that it is between the base and the plane. Each of the three vertical faces of the pyramid is tangent to one of the spheres at a point on the triangular face along its altitude from the vertex of the pyramid to the side of length $6$. The distance that these points of tangency are from the base of the pyramid is $\tfrac mn$, where $m$ and $n$ are relatively prime positive integers. Find $m+n$.
[asy]
size(200);
defaultpen(linewidth(0.8));
pair X=(-.6,.4),A=(-.4,2),B=(-.7,1.85),C=(-1.1,2.05);
picture spherex;
filldraw(spherex,unitcircle,white);
draw(spherex,(-1,0)..(-.2,-.2)..(1,0)^^(0,1)..(-.2,-.2)..(0,-1));
add(shift(-0.5,0.6)*spherex);
filldraw(X--A--C--cycle,gray);
draw(A--B--C^^X--B);
add(shift(-1.5,0.2)*spherex);
add(spherex);
[/asy]
2015 AMC 12/AHSME, 16
A regular hexagon with sides of length $6$ has an isosceles triangle attached to each side. Each of these triangles has two sides of length $8$. The isosceles triangles are folded to make a pyramid with the hexagon as the base of the pyramid. What is the volume of the pyramid?
$\textbf{(A) }18\qquad\textbf{(B) }162\qquad\textbf{(C) }36\sqrt{21}\qquad\textbf{(D) }18\sqrt{138}\qquad\textbf{(E) }54\sqrt{21}$
2000 Polish MO Finals, 1
$PA_1A_2...A_n$ is a pyramid. The base $A_1A_2...A_n$ is a regular n-gon. The apex $P$ is placed so that the lines $PA_i$ all make an angle $60^{\cdot}$ with the plane of the base. For which $n$ is it possible to find $B_i$ on $PA_i$ for $i = 2, 3, ... , n$ such that $A_1B_2 + B_2B_3 + B_3B_4 + ... + B_{n-1}B_n + B_nA_1 < 2A_1P$?
IV Soros Olympiad 1997 - 98 (Russia), 11.9
Cut pyramid $ABCD$ into $8$ equal and similar pyramids, if:
a) $AB = BC = CD$, $\angle ABC =\angle BCD = 90^o$, dihedral angle at edge $BC$ is right
b) all plane angles at vertex $B$ are right and $AB = BC = BD\sqrt2$.
Note. Whether there are other types of triangular pyramids that can be cut into any number similar to the original pyramids (their number is not necessarily $8$ and the pyramids are not necessarily equal to each other) is currently unknown