Summer is a great time to explore cool problems to keep your skills sharp!  Schedule a class today!

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k a May Highlights and 2025 AoPS Online Class Information
jlacosta   0
May 1, 2025
May is an exciting month! National MATHCOUNTS is the second week of May in Washington D.C. and our Founder, Richard Rusczyk will be presenting a seminar, Preparing Strong Math Students for College and Careers, on May 11th.

Are you interested in working towards MATHCOUNTS and don’t know where to start? We have you covered! If you have taken Prealgebra, then you are ready for MATHCOUNTS/AMC 8 Basics. Already aiming for State or National MATHCOUNTS and harder AMC 8 problems? Then our MATHCOUNTS/AMC 8 Advanced course is for you.

Summer camps are starting next month at the Virtual Campus in math and language arts that are 2 - to 4 - weeks in duration. Spaces are still available - don’t miss your chance to have an enriching summer experience. There are middle and high school competition math camps as well as Math Beasts camps that review key topics coupled with fun explorations covering areas such as graph theory (Math Beasts Camp 6), cryptography (Math Beasts Camp 7-8), and topology (Math Beasts Camp 8-9)!

Be sure to mark your calendars for the following upcoming events:
[list][*]May 9th, 4:30pm PT/7:30pm ET, Casework 2: Overwhelming Evidence — A Text Adventure, a game where participants will work together to navigate the map, solve puzzles, and win! All are welcome.
[*]May 19th, 4:30pm PT/7:30pm ET, What's Next After Beast Academy?, designed for students finishing Beast Academy and ready for Prealgebra 1.
[*]May 20th, 4:00pm PT/7:00pm ET, Mathcamp 2025 Qualifying Quiz Part 1 Math Jam, Problems 1 to 4, join the Canada/USA Mathcamp staff for this exciting Math Jam, where they discuss solutions to Problems 1 to 4 of the 2025 Mathcamp Qualifying Quiz!
[*]May 21st, 4:00pm PT/7:00pm ET, Mathcamp 2025 Qualifying Quiz Part 2 Math Jam, Problems 5 and 6, Canada/USA Mathcamp staff will discuss solutions to Problems 5 and 6 of the 2025 Mathcamp Qualifying Quiz![/list]
Our full course list for upcoming classes is below:
All classes run 7:30pm-8:45pm ET/4:30pm - 5:45pm PT unless otherwise noted.

Introductory: Grades 5-10

Prealgebra 1 Self-Paced

Prealgebra 1
Tuesday, May 13 - Aug 26
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Prealgebra 2 Self-Paced

Prealgebra 2
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Introduction to Algebra A Self-Paced

Introduction to Algebra A
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Introduction to Counting & Probability Self-Paced

Introduction to Counting & Probability
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Introduction to Number Theory
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Tuesday, Jul 15 - Sep 30

Introduction to Algebra B Self-Paced

Introduction to Algebra B
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Introduction to Geometry
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Paradoxes and Infinity
Mon, Tue, Wed, & Thurs, Jul 14 - Jul 16 (meets every day of the week!)

Intermediate: Grades 8-12

Intermediate Algebra
Sunday, Jun 1 - Nov 23
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Wednesday, Jun 25 - Dec 10
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Intermediate Counting & Probability
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Intermediate Number Theory
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Precalculus
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Advanced: Grades 9-12

Olympiad Geometry
Tuesday, Jun 10 - Aug 26

Calculus
Tuesday, May 27 - Nov 11
Wednesday, Jun 25 - Dec 17

Group Theory
Thursday, Jun 12 - Sep 11

Contest Preparation: Grades 6-12

MATHCOUNTS/AMC 8 Basics
Friday, May 23 - Aug 15
Monday, Jun 2 - Aug 18
Thursday, Jun 12 - Aug 28
Sunday, Jun 22 - Sep 21
Tues & Thurs, Jul 8 - Aug 14 (meets twice a week!)

MATHCOUNTS/AMC 8 Advanced
Sunday, May 11 - Aug 10
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Wednesday, Jun 11 - Aug 27
Sunday, Jun 22 - Sep 21
Tues & Thurs, Jul 8 - Aug 14 (meets twice a week!)

AMC 10 Problem Series
Friday, May 9 - Aug 1
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Tuesday, May 27 - Aug 12
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Thursday, May 22 - Jul 31

AIME Problem Series B
Sunday, Jun 22 - Sep 21

F=ma Problem Series
Wednesday, Jun 11 - Aug 27

WOOT Programs
Visit the pages linked for full schedule details for each of these programs!


MathWOOT Level 1
MathWOOT Level 2
ChemWOOT
CodeWOOT
PhysicsWOOT

Programming

Introduction to Programming with Python
Thursday, May 22 - Aug 7
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Physics

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Physics 1: Mechanics
Thursday, May 22 - Oct 30
Monday, Jun 23 - Dec 15

Relativity
Mon, Tue, Wed & Thurs, Jun 23 - Jun 26 (meets every day of the week!)
0 replies
jlacosta
May 1, 2025
0 replies
k i Peer-to-Peer Programs Forum
jwelsh   157
N Dec 11, 2023 by cw357
Many of our AoPS Community members share their knowledge with their peers in a variety of ways, ranging from creating mock contests to creating real contests to writing handouts to hosting sessions as part of our partnership with schoolhouse.world.

To facilitate students in these efforts, we have created a new Peer-to-Peer Programs forum. With the creation of this forum, we are starting a new process for those of you who want to advertise your efforts. These advertisements and ensuing discussions have been cluttering up some of the forums that were meant for other purposes, so we’re gathering these topics in one place. This also allows students to find new peer-to-peer learning opportunities without having to poke around all the other forums.

To announce your program, or to invite others to work with you on it, here’s what to do:

1) Post a new topic in the Peer-to-Peer Programs forum. This will be the discussion thread for your program.

2) Post a single brief post in this thread that links the discussion thread of your program in the Peer-to-Peer Programs forum.

Please note that we’ll move or delete any future advertisement posts that are outside the Peer-to-Peer Programs forum, as well as any posts in this topic that are not brief announcements of new opportunities. In particular, this topic should not be used to discuss specific programs; those discussions should occur in topics in the Peer-to-Peer Programs forum.

Your post in this thread should have what you're sharing (class, session, tutoring, handout, math or coding game/other program) and a link to the thread in the Peer-to-Peer Programs forum, which should have more information (like where to find what you're sharing).
157 replies
jwelsh
Mar 15, 2021
cw357
Dec 11, 2023
k i C&P posting recs by mods
v_Enhance   0
Jun 12, 2020
The purpose of this post is to lay out a few suggestions about what kind of posts work well for the C&P forum. Except in a few cases these are mostly meant to be "suggestions based on historical trends" rather than firm hard rules; we may eventually replace this with an actual list of firm rules but that requires admin approval :) That said, if you post something in the "discouraged" category, you should not be totally surprised if it gets locked; they are discouraged exactly because past experience shows they tend to go badly.
-----------------------------
1. Program discussion: Allowed
If you have questions about specific camps or programs (e.g. which classes are good at X camp?), these questions fit well here. Many camps/programs have specific sub-forums too but we understand a lot of them are not active.
-----------------------------
2. Results discussion: Allowed
You can make threads about e.g. how you did on contests (including AMC), though on AMC day when there is a lot of discussion. Moderators and administrators may do a lot of thread-merging / forum-wrangling to keep things in one place.
-----------------------------
3. Reposting solutions or questions to past AMC/AIME/USAMO problems: Allowed
This forum contains a post for nearly every problem from AMC8, AMC10, AMC12, AIME, USAJMO, USAMO (and these links give you an index of all these posts). It is always permitted to post a full solution to any problem in its own thread (linked above), regardless of how old the problem is, and even if this solution is similar to one that has already been posted. We encourage this type of posting because it is helpful for the user to explain their solution in full to an audience, and for future users who want to see multiple approaches to a problem or even just the frequency distribution of common approaches. We do ask for some explanation; if you just post "the answer is (B); ez" then you are not adding anything useful.

You are also encouraged to post questions about a specific problem in the specific thread for that problem, or about previous user's solutions. It's almost always better to use the existing thread than to start a new one, to keep all the discussion in one place easily searchable for future visitors.
-----------------------------
4. Advice posts: Allowed, but read below first
You can use this forum to ask for advice about how to prepare for math competitions in general. But you should be aware that this question has been asked many many times. Before making a post, you are encouraged to look at the following:
[list]
[*] Stop looking for the right training: A generic post about advice that keeps getting stickied :)
[*] There is an enormous list of links on the Wiki of books / problems / etc for all levels.
[/list]
When you do post, we really encourage you to be as specific as possible in your question. Tell us about your background, what you've tried already, etc.

Actually, the absolute best way to get a helpful response is to take a few examples of problems that you tried to solve but couldn't, and explain what you tried on them / why you couldn't solve them. Here is a great example of a specific question.
-----------------------------
5. Publicity: use P2P forum instead
See https://artofproblemsolving.com/community/c5h2489297_peertopeer_programs_forum.
Some exceptions have been allowed in the past, but these require approval from administrators. (I am not totally sure what the criteria is. I am not an administrator.)
-----------------------------
6. Mock contests: use Mock Contests forum instead
Mock contests should be posted in the dedicated forum instead:
https://artofproblemsolving.com/community/c594864_aops_mock_contests
-----------------------------
7. AMC procedural questions: suggest to contact the AMC HQ instead
If you have a question like "how do I submit a change of venue form for the AIME" or "why is my name not on the qualifiers list even though I have a 300 index", you would be better off calling or emailing the AMC program to ask, they are the ones who can help you :)
-----------------------------
8. Discussion of random math problems: suggest to use MSM/HSM/HSO instead
If you are discussing a specific math problem that isn't from the AMC/AIME/USAMO, it's better to post these in Middle School Math, High School Math, High School Olympiads instead.
-----------------------------
9. Politics: suggest to use Round Table instead
There are important conversations to be had about things like gender diversity in math contests, etc., for sure. However, from experience we think that C&P is historically not a good place to have these conversations, as they go off the rails very quickly. We encourage you to use the Round Table instead, where it is much more clear that all posts need to be serious.
-----------------------------
10. MAA complaints: discouraged
We don't want to pretend that the MAA is perfect or that we agree with everything they do. However, we chose to discourage this sort of behavior because in practice most of the comments we see are not useful and some are frankly offensive.
[list] [*] If you just want to blow off steam, do it on your blog instead.
[*] When you have criticism, it should be reasoned, well-thought and constructive. What we mean by this is, for example, when the AOIME was announced, there was great outrage about potential cheating. Well, do you really think that this is something the organizers didn't think about too? Simply posting that "people will cheat and steal my USAMOO qualification, the MAA are idiots!" is not helpful as it is not bringing any new information to the table.
[*] Even if you do have reasoned, well-thought, constructive criticism, we think it is actually better to email it the MAA instead, rather than post it here. Experience shows that even polite, well-meaning suggestions posted in C&P are often derailed by less mature users who insist on complaining about everything.
[/list]
-----------------------------
11. Memes and joke posts: discouraged
It's fine to make jokes or lighthearted posts every so often. But it should be done with discretion. Ideally, jokes should be done within a longer post that has other content. For example, in my response to one user's question about olympiad combinatorics, I used a silly picture of Sogiita Gunha, but it was done within a context of a much longer post where it was meant to actually make a point.

On the other hand, there are many threads which consist largely of posts whose only content is an attached meme with the word "MAA" in it. When done in excess like this, the jokes reflect poorly on the community, so we explicitly discourage them.
-----------------------------
12. Questions that no one can answer: discouraged
Examples of this: "will MIT ask for AOIME scores?", "what will the AIME 2021 cutoffs be (asked in 2020)", etc. Basically, if you ask a question on this forum, it's better if the question is something that a user can plausibly answer :)
-----------------------------
13. Blind speculation: discouraged
Along these lines, if you do see a question that you don't have an answer to, we discourage "blindly guessing" as it leads to spreading of baseless rumors. For example, if you see some user posting "why are there fewer qualifiers than usual this year?", you should not reply "the MAA must have been worried about online cheating so they took fewer people!!". Was sich überhaupt sagen lässt, lässt sich klar sagen; und wovon man nicht reden kann, darüber muss man schweigen.
-----------------------------
14. Discussion of cheating: strongly discouraged
If you have evidence or reasonable suspicion of cheating, please report this to your Competition Manager or to the AMC HQ; these forums cannot help you.
Otherwise, please avoid public discussion of cheating. That is: no discussion of methods of cheating, no speculation about how cheating affects cutoffs, and so on --- it is not helpful to anyone, and it creates a sour atmosphere. A longer explanation is given in Seriously, please stop discussing how to cheat.
-----------------------------
15. Cutoff jokes: never allowed
Whenever the cutoffs for any major contest are released, it is very obvious when they are official. In the past, this has been achieved by the numbers being posted on the official AMC website (here) or through a post from the AMCDirector account.

You must never post fake cutoffs, even as a joke. You should also refrain from posting cutoffs that you've heard of via email, etc., because it is better to wait for the obvious official announcement. A longer explanation is given in A Treatise on Cutoff Trolling.
-----------------------------
16. Meanness: never allowed
Being mean is worse than being immature and unproductive. If another user does something which you think is inappropriate, use the Report button to bring the post to moderator attention, or if you really must reply, do so in a way that is tactful and constructive rather than inflammatory.
-----------------------------

Finally, we remind you all to sit back and enjoy the problems. :D

-----------------------------
(EDIT 2024-09-13: AoPS has asked to me to add the following item.)

Advertising paid program or service: never allowed

Per the AoPS Terms of Service (rule 5h), general advertisements are not allowed.

While we do allow advertisements of official contests (at the MAA and MATHCOUNTS level) and those run by college students with at least one successful year, any and all advertisements of a paid service or program is not allowed and will be deleted.
0 replies
v_Enhance
Jun 12, 2020
0 replies
k i Stop looking for the "right" training
v_Enhance   50
N Oct 16, 2017 by blawho12
Source: Contest advice
EDIT 2019-02-01: https://blog.evanchen.cc/2019/01/31/math-contest-platitudes-v3/ is the updated version of this.

EDIT 2021-06-09: see also https://web.evanchen.cc/faq-contest.html.

Original 2013 post
50 replies
v_Enhance
Feb 15, 2013
blawho12
Oct 16, 2017
D,E,F are collinear.
TUAN2k8   0
3 minutes ago
Source: Own
Help me with this:
0 replies
TUAN2k8
3 minutes ago
0 replies
partitioning 1 to p-1 into several a+b=c (mod p)
capoouo   4
N 14 minutes ago by NerdyNashville
Source: own
Given a prime number $p$, a set is said to be $p$-good if the set contains exactly three elements $a, b, c$ and $a + b \equiv c \pmod{p}$.
Find all prime number $p$ such that $\{ 1, 2, \cdots, p-1 \}$ can be partitioned into several $p$-good sets.

Proposed by capoouo
4 replies
capoouo
Apr 21, 2024
NerdyNashville
14 minutes ago
NT Game in Iran TST
M11100111001Y1R   6
N an hour ago by sami1618
Source: Iran TST 2025 Test 1 Problem 2
Suppose \( p \) is a prime number. We have a number of cards, each of which has a number written on it such that each of the numbers \(1, \dots, p-1 \) appears at most once and $0$ exactly once. To design a game, for each pair of cards \( x \) and \( y \), we want to determine which card wins over the other. The following conditions must be satisfied:

$a)$ If card \( x \) wins over card \( y \), and card \( y \) wins over card \( z \), then card \( x \) must also win over card \( z \).

$b)$ If card \( x \) does not win over card \( y \), and card \( y \) does not win over card \( z \), then for any card \( t \), card \( x + z \) must not win over card \( y + t \).

What is the maximum number of cards such that the game can be designed (i.e., one card does not defeat another unless the victory is symmetric or consistent)?
6 replies
M11100111001Y1R
Yesterday at 6:19 AM
sami1618
an hour ago
Brilliant Problem
M11100111001Y1R   1
N an hour ago by aaravdodhia
Source: Iran TST 2025 Test 3 Problem 3
Find all sequences \( (a_n) \) of natural numbers such that for every pair of natural numbers \( r \) and \( s \), the following inequality holds:
\[
\frac{1}{2} < \frac{\gcd(a_r, a_s)}{\gcd(r, s)} < 2
\]
1 reply
M11100111001Y1R
Yesterday at 7:28 AM
aaravdodhia
an hour ago
2014 amc 10 a problem 23
Rook567   3
N Yesterday at 4:13 PM by Rook567
Why do solutions assume 30 60 90 triangles?
If you assume 45 45 90 you get 5/6 as answer, don’t you?
3 replies
Rook567
Monday at 7:31 PM
Rook567
Yesterday at 4:13 PM
Inequality with a^2+b^2+c^2+abc=4
cn2_71828182846   72
N Yesterday at 4:12 PM by endless_abyss
Source: USAMO 2001 #3
Let $a, b, c \geq 0$ and satisfy \[ a^2+b^2+c^2 +abc = 4 . \] Show that \[ 0 \le ab + bc + ca - abc \leq 2. \]
72 replies
cn2_71828182846
Jun 27, 2004
endless_abyss
Yesterday at 4:12 PM
Special Points on $BC$
tenniskidperson3   40
N Yesterday at 3:43 PM by dipinsubedi
Source: 2013 USAMO Problem 6
Let $ABC$ be a triangle. Find all points $P$ on segment $BC$ satisfying the following property: If $X$ and $Y$ are the intersections of line $PA$ with the common external tangent lines of the circumcircles of triangles $PAB$ and $PAC$, then \[\left(\frac{PA}{XY}\right)^2+\frac{PB\cdot PC}{AB\cdot AC}=1.\]
40 replies
tenniskidperson3
May 1, 2013
dipinsubedi
Yesterday at 3:43 PM
Alcumus vs books
UnbeatableJJ   12
N Yesterday at 2:59 PM by pingpongmerrily
If I am aiming for AIME, then JMO afterwards, is Alcumus adequate, or I still need to do the problems on AoPS books?

I got AMC 23 this year, and never took amc 10 before. If I master the alcumus of intermediate algebra (making all of the bars blue). How likely I can qualify for AIME 2026?
12 replies
UnbeatableJJ
Apr 23, 2025
pingpongmerrily
Yesterday at 2:59 PM
Zsigmondy's theorem
V0305   17
N Yesterday at 7:22 AM by whwlqkd
Is Zsigmondy's theorem allowed on the IMO, and is it allowed on the AMC series of proof competitions (e.g. USAJMO, USA TSTST)?
17 replies
V0305
May 24, 2025
whwlqkd
Yesterday at 7:22 AM
USAJMO problem 3: Inequality
BOGTRO   106
N Monday at 11:12 PM by Learning11
Let $a,b,c$ be positive real numbers. Prove that $\frac{a^3+3b^3}{5a+b}+\frac{b^3+3c^3}{5b+c}+\frac{c^3+3a^3}{5c+a} \geq \frac{2}{3}(a^2+b^2+c^2)$.
106 replies
BOGTRO
Apr 24, 2012
Learning11
Monday at 11:12 PM
what the yap
KevinYang2.71   31
N Monday at 3:26 PM by Blast_S1
Source: USAMO 2025/3
Alice the architect and Bob the builder play a game. First, Alice chooses two points $P$ and $Q$ in the plane and a subset $\mathcal{S}$ of the plane, which are announced to Bob. Next, Bob marks infinitely many points in the plane, designating each a city. He may not place two cities within distance at most one unit of each other, and no three cities he places may be collinear. Finally, roads are constructed between the cities as follows: for each pair $A,\,B$ of cities, they are connected with a road along the line segment $AB$ if and only if the following condition holds:
[center]For every city $C$ distinct from $A$ and $B$, there exists $R\in\mathcal{S}$ such[/center]
[center]that $\triangle PQR$ is directly similar to either $\triangle ABC$ or $\triangle BAC$.[/center]
Alice wins the game if (i) the resulting roads allow for travel between any pair of cities via a finite sequence of roads and (ii) no two roads cross. Otherwise, Bob wins. Determine, with proof, which player has a winning strategy.

Note: $\triangle UVW$ is directly similar to $\triangle XYZ$ if there exists a sequence of rotations, translations, and dilations sending $U$ to $X$, $V$ to $Y$, and $W$ to $Z$.
31 replies
KevinYang2.71
Mar 20, 2025
Blast_S1
Monday at 3:26 PM
Mustang Math Recruitment is Open!
MustangMathTournament   3
N Monday at 3:21 PM by Puzzlebooks206
The Interest Form for joining Mustang Math is open!

Hello all!

We're Mustang Math, and we are currently recruiting for the 2025-2026 year! If you are a high school or college student and are passionate about promoting an interest in competition math to younger students, you should strongly consider filling out the following form: https://link.mustangmath.com/join. Every member in MM truly has the potential to make a huge impact, no matter your experience!

About Mustang Math

Mustang Math is a nonprofit organization of high school and college volunteers that is dedicated to providing middle schoolers access to challenging, interesting, fun, and collaborative math competitions and resources. Having reached over 4000 U.S. competitors and 1150 international competitors in our first six years, we are excited to expand our team to offer our events to even more mathematically inclined students.

PROJECTS
We have worked on various math-related projects. Our annual team math competition, Mustang Math Tournament (MMT) recently ran. We hosted 8 in-person competitions based in Washington, NorCal, SoCal, Illinois, Georgia, Massachusetts, Nevada and New Jersey, as well as an online competition run nationally. In total, we had almost 900 competitors, and the students had glowing reviews of the event. MMT International will once again be running later in August, and with it, we anticipate our contest to reach over a thousand students.

In our classes, we teach students math in fun and engaging math lessons and help them discover the beauty of mathematics. Our aspiring tech team is working on a variety of unique projects like our website and custom test platform. We also have a newsletter, which, combined with our social media presence, helps to keep the mathematics community engaged with cool puzzles, tidbits, and information about the math world! Our design team ensures all our merch and material is aesthetically pleasing.

Some highlights of this past year include 1000+ students in our classes, AMC10 mock with 150+ participants, our monthly newsletter to a subscriber base of 6000+, creating 8 designs for 800 pieces of physical merchandise, as well as improving our custom website (mustangmath.com, 20k visits) and test-taking platform (comp.mt, 6500+ users).

Why Join Mustang Math?

As a non-profit organization on the rise, there are numerous opportunities for volunteers to share ideas and suggest projects that they are interested in. Through our organizational structure, members who are committed have the opportunity to become a part of the leadership team. Overall, working in the Mustang Math team is both a fun and fulfilling experience where volunteers are able to pursue their passion all while learning how to take initiative and work with peers. We welcome everyone interested in joining!

More Information

To learn more, visit https://link.mustangmath.com/RecruitmentInfo. If you have any questions or concerns, please email us at contact@mustangmath.com.

https://link.mustangmath.com/join
3 replies
MustangMathTournament
May 24, 2025
Puzzlebooks206
Monday at 3:21 PM
[TEST RELEASED] OMMC Year 5
DottedCaculator   173
N Monday at 3:01 PM by drhong
Test portal: https://ommc-test-portal-2025.vercel.app/

Hello to all creative problem solvers,

Do you want to work on a fun, untimed team math competition with amazing questions by MOPpers and IMO & EGMO medalists? $\phantom{You lost the game.}$
Do you want to have a chance to win thousands in cash and raffle prizes (no matter your skill level)?

Check out the fifth annual iteration of the

Online Monmouth Math Competition!

Online Monmouth Math Competition, or OMMC, is a 501c3 accredited nonprofit organization managed by adults, college students, and high schoolers which aims to give talented high school and middle school students an exciting way to develop their skills in mathematics.

Our website: https://www.ommcofficial.org/

This is not a local competition; any student 18 or younger anywhere in the world can attend. We have changed some elements of our contest format, so read carefully and thoroughly. Join our Discord or monitor this thread for updates and test releases.

How hard is it?

We plan to raffle out a TON of prizes over all competitors regardless of performance. So just submit: a few minutes of your time will give you a great chance to win amazing prizes!

How are the problems?

You can check out our past problems and sample problems here:
https://www.ommcofficial.org/sample
https://www.ommcofficial.org/2022-documents
https://www.ommcofficial.org/2023-documents
https://www.ommcofficial.org/ommc-amc

How will the test be held?/How do I sign up?

Solo teams?

Test Policy

Timeline:
Main Round: May 17th - May 24th
Test Portal Released. The Main Round of the contest is held. The Main Round consists of 25 questions that each have a numerical answer. Teams will have the entire time interval to work on the questions. They can submit any time during the interval. Teams are free to edit their submissions before the period ends, even after they submit.

Final Round: May 26th - May 28th
The top placing teams will qualify for this invitational round (5-10 questions). The final round consists of 5-10 proof questions. Teams again will have the entire time interval to work on these questions and can submit their proofs any time during this interval. Teams are free to edit their submissions before the period ends, even after they submit.

Conclusion of Competition: Early June
Solutions will be released, winners announced, and prizes sent out to winners.

Scoring:

Prizes:

I have more questions. Whom do I ask?

We hope for your participation, and good luck!

OMMC staff

OMMC’S 2025 EVENTS ARE SPONSORED BY:

[list]
[*]Nontrivial Fellowship
[*]Citadel
[*]SPARC
[*]Jane Street
[*]And counting!
[/list]
173 replies
DottedCaculator
Apr 26, 2025
drhong
Monday at 3:01 PM
[CASH PRIZES] IndyINTEGIRLS Spring Math Competition
Indy_Integirls   74
N Monday at 12:35 PM by OGMATH
[center]IMAGE

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74 replies
Indy_Integirls
May 11, 2025
OGMATH
Monday at 12:35 PM
Impossible divisibility
pohoatza   35
N Apr 29, 2025 by cursed_tangent1434
Source: Romanian TST 3 2008, Problem 3
Let $ m,\ n \geq 3$ be positive odd integers. Prove that $ 2^{m}-1$ doesn't divide $ 3^{n}-1$.
35 replies
pohoatza
Jun 7, 2008
cursed_tangent1434
Apr 29, 2025
Impossible divisibility
G H J
Source: Romanian TST 3 2008, Problem 3
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pohoatza
1145 posts
#1 • 6 Y
Y by nguyendangkhoa17112003, Adventure10, megarnie, Mango247, and 2 other users
Let $ m,\ n \geq 3$ be positive odd integers. Prove that $ 2^{m}-1$ doesn't divide $ 3^{n}-1$.
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Rust
5049 posts
#2 • 2 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247
$ 3^n-1\not |2^m-1$, because $ 3^n-1$ even, $ 2^m-1$ odd.
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freemind
337 posts
#3 • 18 Y
Y by fish135, gethd, kgo, nguyendangkhoa17112003, Supercali, Williamgolly, The_Giver, karitoshi, Wizard0001, pavel kozlov, Kanep, nguyenvuthanhha, Adventure10, Mango247, and 4 other users
@Rust: divides means "is a divisor of", not "is divisible by".

Nice problem :).

Assume, to the contrary, that there are such odd numbers $ m,n\ge3$ for which $ 2^m-1|3^n-1$.

Let $ p$ be a prime divisor of $ 2^m-1$ of the form $ 4k+3$. Because $ p|3^n-1$, we have that $ d=\text{ord}_3(p)$ is odd. Since $ d|p-1=4k+2$, we have $ d|2k+1$, hence $ 3^{\frac{p-1}2}=\binom{\underline3}p=1$. Then, by the Quadratic Reciprocity Law, we have $ \binom{\underline3}p\cdot\binom{\underline p}3=(-1)^{\frac{3-1}2\cdot\frac{p-1}2}=-1$ hence $ \binom{\underline p}3=-1$, so $ p=3t+2$.

Let now $ p$ be a prime divisor of $ 2^m-1$ of the form $ 4k+1$. A reasoning just as above and $ \binom{\underline3}p\cdot\binom{\underline p}3=(-1)^{\frac{3-1}2\cdot\frac{p-1}2}=1$ leads to $ \binom{\underline p}3=1$, hence $ p=3t+1$.

So let $ M$ be the multiset of prime divisors $ p$ of $ 2^m-1$ of the form $ 4k+3$, containing each prime with multiplicity equal to its exponent in the prime factorization of $ 2^m-1$. Because $ 2^m-1\equiv 3\pmod 4$, $ |M|$ is odd. But $ M$ contains precisely all prime divisors $ p$ of the form $ 3t+2$ of $ 2^m-1$. Then considering $ \text{mod}$ $ 3$, we have $ 2^m-1\equiv 2^{|M|}=2\pmod 3$, Contradiction.
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Erken
1363 posts
#4 • 1 Y
Y by Adventure10
Suppose that $ 2^{m} - 1$ divides $ 3^{n} - 1$.As we know $ n$ is odd,let $ n = 2k - 1$,where $ k\geq 2$.
It is easy to understand that $ 2^{m} - 1\equiv - 5$ mod $ 12$.
Since $ 2^{m} - 1$ is not divisible by $ 3$,we conclude that all prime divisors of $ 2^{m} - 1$ are congruent to either $ + 5, - 5$,or $ + 1, - 1$ mod $ 12$,but as we know $ 2^{m} - 1\equiv - 5$,
it follows that, there exist $ p\equiv 5$ or $ p\equiv - 5$ mod $ 12$ and $ p$ divides $ 2^{m} - 1$,thus it divides $ 3^{n} - 1$,too,but then $ p$ divides $ 3(3^{n} - 1)$ as well,hence $ 3^{2k} = 3^{n + 1}\equiv 3$ mod $ p$,so $ 3$ is a quadratic residue mod $ p$,but this contradicts to the quadratic reciprocity theorem,because $ p\equiv 5$ or $ - 5$ mod $ 12$.
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TTsphn
1313 posts
#5 • 3 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247, Want-to-study-in-NTU-MATH
Other solution (same free mind but have a bit difference)
Call p is a odd prime divisor of $ 3^n - 1$
$ \Rightarrow p|3^{\frac {n + 1}{2}} - 3$
$ \Rightarrow \frac (\frac {3}{p}) = 1$
$ \Rightarrow p\equiv 1 (\mod 12)$ or $ p\equiv - 1 (\mod 12)$
So if $ k|3^n - 1$ then $ k\equiv 1 (\mod 12)$ or $ k\equiv - 1(\mod 12)$
But $ 2^n - 1\equiv 7 (\mod 12)$ ,it give contradiction .
More than $ rad(2^m - 1) \not |3^m - 1$
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kim_ina_88
9 posts
#6 • 1 Y
Y by Adventure10
freemind wrote:
Let $ p$ be a prime divisor of $ 2^m - 1$ of the form $ 4k + 3$. Because $ p|3^n - 1$, we have that $ d = \text{ord}_3(p)$ is odd. Since $ d|p - 1 = 4k + 2$, we have $ d|2k + 1$, hence $ 3^{\frac {p - 1}2} = \binom{\underline3}p = 1$.
how you can say that if dl 4k+2 then dl 2k+1 for example p=7 7l 3^6-1 but 7l 3^3-1
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freemind
337 posts
#7 • 2 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247
$ d$ is odd because $ d|n$ and $ n$ is odd.
kim_ina_88 wrote:
freemind wrote:
Let $ p$ be a prime divisor of $ 2^m - 1$ of the form $ 4k + 3$. Because $ p|3^n - 1$, we have that $ d = \text{ord}_3(p)$ is odd. Since $ d|p - 1 = 4k + 2$, we have $ d|2k + 1$, hence $ 3^{\frac {p - 1}2} = \binom{\underline3}p = 1$.
how you can say that if dl 4k+2 then dl 2k+1 for example p=7 7l 3^6-1 but 7l 3^3-1
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AndreiAndronache
88 posts
#8 • 2 Y
Y by pavel kozlov, Adventure10
Very simple, if we use Jacobi's symbol:
We note $3^{\dfrac{n-1}{2}}=a\Rightarrow 3a^2\equiv 1(mod\,\; 2^m-1)\Rightarrow (3a)^2\equiv 3(mod\,\; 2^m-1)\Rightarrow (\dfrac{3}{2^m-1})=1$. By use quadratic reciprocity, $(\dfrac{2^m-1}{3})*(-1)^{\dfrac{3-1}{2}*\dfrac{2^m-1-1}{2}}=1\Rightarrow (\dfrac{2^m-1}{3})=-1$, obviously false, because $2^m\equiv 2(mod\,\; 3)$.
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anantmudgal09
1980 posts
#10 • 1 Y
Y by Adventure10
After noticing that there exists a prime $p$ such that $p \mid 2^m-1$ and that $p \equiv 5,7 (mod 12)$ we conclude by quadratic reciprocity law.
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niyu
830 posts
#12 • 2 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247
I will solve the following alternative formulation of this problem:
Alternative Formulation wrote:
Let $a$ and $b$ be positive integers such that $2^a - 1$ divides $3^b - 1$. Prove that either $a = 1$ or $b$ is even.

Solution: Suppose $a > 1$ and $b$ is odd. Let $p \mid 2^a - 1$ be a prime. Then,
\begin{align*}
		p &\mid 3^b - 1 \\
		p &\mid 3^{b + 1} - 3.
	\end{align*}Hence $\left(\frac{3}{p}\right) = 1$. If $p \equiv 1 \pmod{4}$, we have by Quadratic Reciprocity that
\begin{align*}
		\left(\frac{p}{3}\right) &= \left(\frac{3}{p}\right) \\
		&= 1,
	\end{align*}so $p \equiv 1 \pmod{12}$. If $p \equiv -1 \pmod{4}$, we have by Quadratic Reciprocity that
\begin{align*}
		\left(\frac{p}{3}\right) &= -\left(\frac{3}{p}\right) \\
		&= -1,
	\end{align*}so $p \equiv -1 \pmod{12}$. Hence, $p$ must be of the form $12k \pm 1$. Since $a > 1$, we have
\begin{align*}
		2^a - 1 &\equiv -1 \pmod{4}.
	\end{align*}Also, note that
\begin{align*}
		2^a - 1 \equiv 0, 1 \pmod{3}.
	\end{align*}Hence
\begin{align*}
		2^a - 1 \equiv 3, 7 \pmod{12}.
	\end{align*}Hence there exists a prime $q \mid 2^a - 1$ that is not of the form $12k \pm 1$, contradiction. Thus, either $a = 1$ or $b$ is even, as desired. $\Box$
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shankarmath
544 posts
#13 • 2 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247
QR
This post has been edited 1 time. Last edited by shankarmath, Mar 27, 2019, 3:39 PM
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yayups
1614 posts
#14 • 6 Y
Y by pad, AlastorMoody, skrublord420, Kobayashi, Adventure10, Mango247
Suppose $p$ is some prime factor of $3^n-1$. Then, we have that
\[\left(3^{\frac{n+1}{2}}\right)^2\equiv 3\pmod{p},\]so $3$ is a quadratic residue mod $p$. Using quadratic reciprocity, this tells us that $p\equiv\pm 1\pmod{12}$.

Therefore, all the prime factors of $2^m-1$ are $\pm 1\pmod{12}$, so $2^m-1\equiv\pm 1\pmod{12}$, so in particular, $2^m\equiv 2\pmod{4}$. Thus, $m=1$, which is a contradiction since $m\ge 3$, so we're done.
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amuthup
779 posts
#15 • 1 Y
Y by Want-to-study-in-NTU-MATH
Suppose $b$ is odd and $2^a-1\mid 3^b-1$ for some $a.$ Consider some prime $p$ dividing $2^a-1.$ We have $$3^b-1\equiv 0\pmod{p}$$$$\implies 3^{b+1}\equiv 3\pmod{p}$$$$\implies \left(\frac{3}{p}\right)=1.$$If $p\equiv 1\pmod{4},$ then $$p\equiv \left(\frac{p}{3}\right)\stackrel{QR}{=}\left(\frac{3}{p}\right)=1\pmod{3}.$$If $p\equiv 3\pmod{4},$ then $$p\equiv \left(\frac{p}{3}\right)\stackrel{QR}{=}-\left(\frac{3}{p}\right)=-1\pmod{3}.$$Therefore, $p\equiv\pm 1\pmod{12}.$ Since our choice of $p$ was arbitrary, we must have $$2^a-1\equiv\pm 1\pmod{12}.$$This is true if and only if $a=1,$ so we are done.
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GeronimoStilton
1521 posts
#16 • 3 Y
Y by Mango247, Mango247, Mango247
We do the following stronger problem.
Stronger Statement wrote:
Let $a$ and $b$ be positive integers such that $2^a-1\mid 3^b-1$. Prove that either $a=1$ or $b$ is even.
Suppose otherwise. As $2^a-1 > 1$, $2^a-1=N$ has some prime divisors $p$.

Claim: For $p\mid N$, we have that $p\equiv \pm 1\pmod{12}$.

Solution: Let $o_p(3)$ be the order of $b$ modulo $p$. As $p\mid N\mid 3^b-1$, we have $o_p(3)\mid b$. Since $b$ is odd, we must have $o_p(3)\mid \frac{p-1}{2}$, since we can disregard powers of $2$ that divide $p-1$. This implies that $3$ is a quadratic residue modulo $p$, so $p\equiv \pm 1\pmod{12}$ as desired. $\fbox{}$

Now, note that this implies $N\equiv \pm 1\pmod{12}$. As $N\equiv -1\pmod{4}$, we get that $N\equiv -1\pmod{12}$. In particular, $2^a-1=N\equiv -1\pmod{3}$. But this would imply $3\mid 2^a$, absurd.
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algebra_star1234
2467 posts
#17
Y by
Since $b$ is odd, we have $3^{b+1} \equiv 3 \pmod{2^{a}-1}$ is a quadratic residue. By quadratic reciprocity,
\[ \left( \frac{3}{2^{a}-1}\right)=\left(\frac{2^{a}-1}{3}\right) (-1)^{2^{a-1}-1} = 1 \cdot -1 = -1 .\]for $a > 1$. Therefore $b$ cannot be odd.
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fireflame241
8 posts
#18
Y by
algebra_star1234 wrote:
Since $b$ is odd, we have $3^{b+1} \equiv 3 \pmod{2^{a}-1}$ is a quadratic residue. By quadratic reciprocity,
\[ \left( \frac{3}{2^{a}-1}\right)=\left(\frac{2^{a}-1}{3}\right) (-1)^{2^{a-1}-1} = 1 \cdot -1 = -1 .\]for $a > 1$. Therefore $b$ cannot be odd.

This is close, but it doesn't work because it's missing the $(-1)^\frac{3-1}{2}=-1$ term, so
\[
  \left(\frac{3}{2^a-1}\right) = 1
\]
It would work if $3$ was changed in the original problem to a value that is 1 mod 4, such as $5$.
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Quantum_fluctuations
1282 posts
#19
Y by
Rust wrote:
$ 3^n-1\not |2^m-1$, because $ 3^n-1$ even, $ 2^m-1$ odd.

Odd number can divide an even number but even number can never divide an odd number.
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VulcanForge
626 posts
#20 • 2 Y
Y by pavel kozlov, Mathandski
We have that $3^{b+1} \equiv 3 \pmod{2^a-1}$ is a quadratic residue; by quadratic reciprocity we have $$\left( \frac{3}{2^a-1} \right) \left( \frac{2^a-1}{3} \right) = (-1)^{(2^a-2)(2)/4} = -1$$so $2^a-1$ is a quadratic nonresidue $\pmod{3}$. This is impossible.
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jj_ca888
2726 posts
#21 • 1 Y
Y by Mathandski
The case where $a = 1$ is trivial. Otherwise, FTSoC assume $a > 1$ and $b$ is odd. Also ote that $a$ must also be odd, else $3 \mid 2^a - 1$.

Select a prime $p$ dividing $2^a - 1$; note that $2^{a+1} \equiv 2 \pmod p$ and $3^{b+1} \equiv 3 \pmod p$. Hence,\[\left(\frac{2}{p}\right) = \left(\frac{3}{p}\right) = 1\]must be true. From $\left(\tfrac{2}{p}\right) = 1$, we get that $\tfrac18(p^2 - 1)$ is even which yields $p \equiv \pm 1 \pmod 8$.
  • If $p \equiv 1 \pmod 8$, then\[1 = \left(\frac{3}{p}\right) = \left(\frac{p}{3}\right)\]and clearly $p \neq 3$ since $a$ is odd, so $p \equiv 1 \pmod 3$. Thus $p \equiv 1 \pmod {24}$.
  • If $p \equiv -1 \pmod 8$, then\[1 = \left(\frac{3}{p}\right) = -\left(\frac{p}{3}\right)\]so $p \equiv -1 \pmod 3$. Thus $p \equiv -1 \pmod {24}$.
Since all primes dividing $2^a - 1$ are $\pm 1$ modulo $24$, the number $2^a - 1$ itself must be $\pm 1$ mod $24$. This reduces to either $24 \mid 2^a$ or $24 \mid 2^{a} - 2$ which are both impossible, so we have our desired contradiction. $\blacksquare$
This post has been edited 2 times. Last edited by jj_ca888, Dec 31, 2020, 6:43 PM
Reason: formatting
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pad
1671 posts
#22
Y by
Suppose $2^m-1\mid 3^n-1$. Suppose $p\mid 2^m-1$, so $p\mid 3^n-1$. Hence
\[ \left(3^{\frac{n+1}{2}}\right)^2 \equiv 3^{n+1} \equiv 3 \pmod{p} \implies \left(\frac{3}{p}\right)=1. \]Hence $p\equiv \pm1 \pmod{12}$. Hence all prime factors of $2^m-1$ are $\pm 1 \pmod{12}$, so $2^m-1 \equiv \pm 1\pmod{12}$. So $2^m\equiv 2 \pmod{12}$, which is a contradiction by mod 4.
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bora_olmez
277 posts
#23
Y by
Cool.

We will use the generalization of the Law of Quadratic Reciprocity for the Jacobi Symbol.
Assume FTSOC that $2^m-1 \mid 3^{2k+1}-1$, then notice that $3$ is a quadratic residue $\pmod{2^m-1}$. Moreover that $m$ must be odd as otherwise $3 \mid 2^m-1$ which is not possible and consequently, $$2^m-1 \equiv 1 \pmod{3}$$We have that , $$1 = \left(\frac{2^m-1}{3}\right)= \left(\frac{3}{2^m-1}\right) \cdot \left(\frac{2^m-1}{3}\right) = (-1)^{\frac{2(m-1)}{4}} = -1$$as $m$ is odd which is a contradiction. $\blacksquare$
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sriraamster
1492 posts
#24
Y by
$a=1$ is trivial so assume $a>1.$

Consider some $p \mid 2^{a}-1.$ Then, $2^{a+1} \equiv 2 \pmod{p},$ meaning \[ \left( \frac{2}{p} \right) = (-1)^{1/8 (p^2-1)} =1 \iff p \equiv \pm 1 \pmod{8} \]as $a+1$ is even, meaning $2$ is a QR mod $p.$ Similarly, $p \mid 3^{b}-1$ and furthermore \[ \left( \frac{3}{p} \right) \left( \frac{p}{3} \right) = (-1)^{1/2(p-1)}. \]If $p \equiv 2 \pmod{3},$ then $ \left( \frac{p}{3} \right) = -1,$ which also gives $p \equiv -1 \pmod{3}.$ Combined, these give $p \equiv -1 \pmod{24}.$ The other case gives $p \equiv 1 \pmod{24},$ so $p \equiv \pm 1 \pmod{24}.$

Therefore, if $p \mid 2^{a}-1$ we also have $p \equiv \pm 1 \pmod{24}.$ Combined this implies that $2^{a} -1 \equiv \pm 1 \pmod{24}$ which are both contradictions due to divisibility reasons. Thus there are no solutions.
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trying_to_solve_br
191 posts
#25
Y by
Can someone check this sol?

Obviously there exists a prime $p$ congruent to 3 mod 4 dividing $2^m-1$. Now, notice that as $m,n$ are odd, $m=2x+1$ and $n=2y+1$ thus $2^m\equiv 1 (p) \implies 2^{2x}.2\equiv 1 (p) \implies (\frac{1/2}{p})=1$, thus we have by legendre symbol properties that $(\frac{2.1/4}{p})=1=(\frac{1/4}{p}).(\frac{2}{p})=1$ which implies $2$ is a quadratic residue mod $p$, similarly for $3$. Respectively, this implies that $p \equiv \{1,-1\} (8), p \equiv \{1,-1\} (12)$, but as $p\equiv 3 (4)$ this implies $p\equiv -1 (mod 8)$ and $p \equiv -1 (mod 12)$. Quadratic recyprocity gives: $(\frac{3}{p}).(\frac{p}{3})=(-1)^{p-1/2}.(-1)^{1}=1$ and thus $p\equiv 1 (3)$ or $p=3$, which both contradict the fact that $p\equiv -1 (mod 12)$
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nguyenvuthanhha
482 posts
#27
Y by
yayups wrote:
Suppose $p$ is some prime factor of $3^n-1$. Then, we have that
\[\left(3^{\frac{n+1}{2}}\right)^2\equiv 3\pmod{p},\]so $3$ is a quadratic residue mod $p$. Using quadratic reciprocity, this tells us that $p\equiv\pm 1\pmod{12}$.

Therefore, all the prime factors of $2^m-1$ are $\pm 1\pmod{12}$, so $2^m-1\equiv\pm 1\pmod{12}$, so in particular, $2^m\equiv 2\pmod{4}$. Thus, $m=1$, which is a contradiction since $m\ge 3$, so we're done.

very good and correct solution :)
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AwesomeYRY
579 posts
#28
Y by
If $a=1$, clearly $2^a-1=1\mid 3^b-1$. Otherwise, if $a$ is even then $3\mid 2^a-1$, so $3\mid 2^a-1\mid 3^b-1$, a contradiction. Thus, we will only consider odd $a$.

Claim 1:For $q\geq 5$, 3 is a quadratic residue mod $q$ if and only if $q\equiv 1,-1\pmod{12}$.
Proof:If $q\equiv 1\pmod{4}$, then $q$ must be a quadratic residue mod 3, so $q\equiv 1\pmod{3}$ too, so $q\equiv 1$. Otherwise, if $q\equiv 3\pmod{4}$, then $q\equiv 2\pmod{3}$ by quadratic recirprocity, so $q\equiv -1$.$\square$


Claim 2:For odd $a$, 3 is not a quadratic residue mod $2^a-1$
Proof: Note that $2,3 \nmid 2^a-1$, and $2^a-1 \equiv 3 \pmod{4}$ and $2^a-1\equiv 1 \pmod{3}$, so $2^a-1\equiv 7\pmod{12}$. Thus, there exists some $q\not\equiv -1,1$ such that $q\mid 2^a-1$. Since by the previous claim, $a$ is not a quadratic residue mod $q$, $a$ is not a quadratic residue mod $2^a-1$.$\square$

Thus, if $b$ is odd, then $3^b=1$ is also not a quadratic residue mod $2^a-1$ a clear contradiction.
This post has been edited 2 times. Last edited by AwesomeYRY, Nov 1, 2021, 3:40 AM
Reason: aops duplicate
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IAmTheHazard
5003 posts
#30 • 1 Y
Y by centslordm
Ok how broken is quadratic reciprocity

We make use of the fact that if a prime $p$ divides $a^k-1$ for $k$ odd, then $a$ is a quadratic residue $\pmod{p}$, since $\mathrm{ord}_p(a)=\tfrac{p-1}{d}$ for some $d \mid k$.
Assume otherwise, and let $p$ be a prime dividing $2^m-1$. Then from the above fact we obtain $(\tfrac{2}{p})=1 \implies p \equiv 1,7 \pmod{8}$. Now, prime factorize
$$2^m-1=p_1^{e_1}p_2^{e_2}\ldots p_k^{e_k}.$$Since $2^m-1 \equiv 7 \pmod{8}$, there are an odd number of indices $i$ such that $e_i$ is odd and $p_i \equiv 7 \pmod{8}$call these indices special. Note that the non-special indices $i$ either satisfy $p_i \equiv 1 \pmod{8}$ or $p_i \equiv 7 \pmod{8}$ and $e_i$ is even.
Now, by assumption, we must have $p_i \mid 3^n-1 \implies (\tfrac{3}{p_i})=1$. Consider the following cases:
  • $p_i \equiv 1 \pmod{8}$. Then by quadratic reciprocity
    $$\left(\frac{3}{p_i}\right)\left(\frac{p_i}{3}\right)=1 \implies \left(\frac{p_i}{3}\right)=1 \implies p_i \equiv 1 \pmod{3}$$
  • $p_i \equiv 7 \pmod{8}$. Then by quadratic reciprocity
    $$\left(\frac{3}{p_i}\right)\left(\frac{p_i}{3}\right)=1 \implies \left(\frac{p_i}{3}\right)=-1 \implies p_i \equiv 2 \pmod{3}$$
Take both sides of $2^m-1=p_1^{e_1}\ldots p_k^{e_k}$ modulo $3$. The LHS is clearly $1 \pmod{3}$. However, since the only $i$ with $p_i^{e_i} \equiv 2 \pmod{3}$ are the special $i$, of which there are an odd number, and the rest are $1 \pmod{3}$either because $p_i \equiv 1 \pmod{3}$ or $e_i$ is even—it follows that the RHS is $2 \pmod{3}$, which is a contradiction. Thus no such $(m,n)$ exist, as desired. $\blacksquare$
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HamstPan38825
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#31
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Suppose that $b$ is odd. If $a$ is even, then for mod $3$ yields a contradiction.

Thus assume $a$ is odd, Let $p \mid 2^a - 1$; thus $2^a \equiv 1 \pmod p$ for $a$ odd implies $\left(\frac 2p\right) = 1$. Similarly, $\left(\frac 3p\right) = 1$.

On the other hand, the first equality holds for $p \equiv \pm 1 \pmod 8$, and the other equality holds for $$(-1)^{(p-1)/2}\left(\frac p3\right) = 1 \iff p \equiv \pm 1 \pmod {12}.$$So $p \equiv \pm 1 \pmod {24}$ and $2^a - 1 \equiv \pm 1 \pmod {24}$, contradiction.
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kamatadu
480 posts
#32 • 1 Y
Y by HoripodoKrishno
Here is the phrasing I received the problem in.
Romania TST 2008 modified wrote:
Let $a > 1$ and $b > 1$ be positive integers such that $2^a-1\mid 3^b-1$. Prove that $b$ is even.

The following below is my solution.

Firstly, if $a$ is even, then we get that $3 \mid 2^a-1\mid 3^b-1$ which gives a contradiction. So $a$ must be odd. Furthermore, FTSOC assume that $b$ is odd too. So we now use $a=2m+1$ and $b=2n+1$, where $m$ and $n$ are +ve integers.

Now pick any prime $p$ such that $p\mid 2^{2m+1}-1$. Clearly $p\not=3$. This gives us that $2^{2m+1}\equiv 1\pmod{p}\implies 2^{2(m+1)}\equiv 2\pmod{p}$, which means that $2$ is a quadratic residue $\pmod{p}$. Similarly, we get that $p\mid 2^{2m+1}\mid 3^{2n+1}$ which further gives that $3$ is a quadratic residue too. Now we proceed using Legendre's notation.

Firstly, from the fact that $\left(\dfrac{2}{p}\right)=1$, we get that $p\equiv \left\{+1,-1\right\}\pmod{8}$. Also, from $\left(\dfrac{3}{p}\right)=1$, we get that $\left(\dfrac{p}{3}\right)=(-1)^{\dfrac{3-1}{2}\cdot\dfrac{p-1}{2}}\cdot\left(\dfrac{3}{p}\right)=(-1)^{\dfrac{p-1}{2}}$.

Now if $p\equiv 1\pmod{8}$, then we get that $\left(\dfrac{p}{3}\right)=-1$ which further gives us that $p\equiv 1\pmod{3}$. Similarly if $p\equiv -1\pmod{8}$, then we get that $p\equiv -1\pmod{3}$. Now finally combining these two using C.R.T., we get that $p\equiv\left\{+1,-1\right\}\pmod{24}$.

Now as $2^{2m+1}-1$ is just a product of a bunch of such primes, we get that $2^{2m+1}-1\equiv \left\{+1, -1\right\}\pmod{24}$. Both of the cases give simple modular contradictions and we are done. :stretcher:
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Pyramix
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#33 • 1 Y
Y by Mathandski
Suppose there exist $a,b$ such that $b$ is odd and $a>1$ and $2^a-1\mid 3^b-1$.

Note that $3\nmid 3^b-1$, which means $3\nmid 2^a-1$, and hence $a$ is odd. Let $p$ be an odd prime such that $p\mid 2^a-1\mid 3^b-1$. Since $a,b$ are odd, $\left(\frac 2p\right)=\left(\frac 3p\right)=1$.

Claim: $p\equiv\pm1\pmod{24}$.
Proof. Since $\left(\frac 2p\right)=1$, we have $p\equiv\pm1\pmod{8}$.
Case 1. $p\equiv 1\pmod{8}$. Then, by Quadratic Reciprocity Law, we have $\left(\frac p3\right)=\left(\frac 3p\right)\left(\frac p3\right)=1$, which means $p\equiv 1\pmod{3}$. Hence, $p\equiv1\pmod{3}$. Combining, we get $p\equiv 1\pmod {24}$.
Case 2. $p\equiv -1\pmod{8}$. Similar to above, we get $p\equiv -1\pmod{24}$.

Note that this means $2^a-1\equiv\pm1\pmod{24}$, either of which is impossible. $\blacksquare$
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OronSH
1748 posts
#34 • 1 Y
Y by Mathandski
If $3^n \equiv 1\pmod{2^m-1}$ then $3$ has odd order w.r.t. all primes dividing $2^m-1,$ so it is a QR mod all primes dividing $2^m-1.$ Then quadratic reciprocity gives $\left(\frac3{2^m-1}\right)=-\left(\frac{2^m-1}3\right)=-\left(\frac13\right)=-1,$ thus there is some $p\mid 2^m-1$ for which $\left(\frac3p\right)=-1,$ contradiction
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Markas
150 posts
#35
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Let b be odd for the sake of contradiction. Now let a be even $\Rightarrow$ $3 \mid 2^a - 1$ $\Rightarrow$ $3 \mid 3^b - 1$, which is impossible $\Rightarrow$ a is odd. We have that a and b are odd. Let $p \mid 2^a - 1$ $\Rightarrow$ $p \mid 3^b - 1$ $\Rightarrow$ $2^a \equiv 1 \pmod p$ and $3^b \equiv 1 \pmod p$ and now considering a and b are odd we get that $2^{a+1} \equiv 2 \pmod p$ and $3^{b+1} \equiv 3 \pmod p$ $\Rightarrow$ $\left(\frac 2p\right) = \left(\frac 3p\right) = 1$. Since $\left(\frac 2p\right) = (-1)^{\frac{p^2-1}{8}} = 1$ we have that $p \equiv  \pm 1 \pmod 8$. Also $\left(\frac 3p \right)\left(\frac p3 \right) = (-1)^{\frac{(p-1)(3-1)}{4}} = (-1)^{\frac{p-1}{2}}$. If $p \equiv 1 \pmod 8$ we have that $\left(\frac p3 \right) = 1$ $\Rightarrow$ $p \equiv 1 \pmod 3$ $\Rightarrow$ $p \equiv 1 \pmod {24}$. If $p \equiv -1 \pmod 8$ we have that $\left(\frac p3 \right) = -1$ $\Rightarrow$ $p \equiv -1 \pmod 3$ $\Rightarrow$ $p \equiv -1 \pmod {24}$ $\Rightarrow$ in conclusion $p \equiv \pm 1 \pmod {24}$. Since each different prime divisor of $2^a - 1$ is $\equiv \pm 1 \pmod {24}$ it follows that $2^a - 1 \equiv \pm 1 \pmod {24}$. If $2^a - 1 \equiv -1 \pmod {24}$ we have that $24 \mid 2^a$, which is obviously impossible $\pmod 3$. If $2^a - 1 \equiv 1 \pmod {24}$ we have that $24 \mid 2^a - 2$ $\Rightarrow$ $8 \mid 2^a - 2$, which is impossible for $a > 3$ $\Rightarrow$ we get the desired contradiction.
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onyqz
195 posts
#36 • 1 Y
Y by Mathandski
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This post has been edited 1 time. Last edited by onyqz, Aug 27, 2024, 4:33 PM
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maxal
629 posts
#37
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My generalization published as Problem 3883 in Crux Mathematicorum 39:9 (2013):

Let $a,b,c,d$ be positive integers such that $a+b$ and $ad+bc$ are odd. Prove that if $2^a - 3^b>1$, then $2^a - 3^b$ does not divide $2^c + 3^d$.
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Mathandski
773 posts
#38
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$            $
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zuat.e
68 posts
#39
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Assume otherwise, that is $2^a-1\mid3^b -1$ with $b$ even and $a>1$, hence $3^b\equiv1\pmod{2^a-1}$, therefore $3^{b+1}\equiv3\pmod{2^a-1}$, so $3$ is a quadratic residue $\pmod{2^a-1}$, consequently: $\prod_{i=1}^k(\frac{3}{p_i})=(\frac{3}{2^a-1})\equiv-(\frac{2^a-1}{3})\equiv-(\frac{1}{3})\equiv-1$, hence $3$ isn't a $QR$ for some $p_i\mid k$, hence $3$ isn't a $QR$ $\pmod{2^a-1}$
This post has been edited 1 time. Last edited by zuat.e, Jan 26, 2025, 5:23 PM
Reason: My solution was wrong
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cursed_tangent1434
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#40
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We consider $a>1$ and $b$ odd in what follows. Clearly $a$ must be odd since if $a$ is even, $3 \mid 2^a-1 \mid 3^b-1$ which is a clear contradiction for all positive integers $b$. Note that for each prime $p \mid 2^a-1$,
\begin{align*}
    3^b & \equiv 1 \pmod{p}\\
    3 & \equiv \left (\frac{1}{3^{{\frac{b-1}{2}}}}\right)^2 \pmod{p}
\end{align*}which implies that $3$ is a quadratic residue $\pmod{p}$ for each prime divisor $p$ of $2^a-1$. Further, the Law of Quadratic Reciprocity states that
\[\left(\frac{p}{3}\right)=\left(\frac{3}{p}\right)\left(\frac{p}{3}\right) = (-1)^{\frac{p-1}{2}}\]since $3$ is a quadratic residue $\pmod{p}$. Now if $p \equiv 1 \pmod{4}$ this implies $p$ is a quadratic residue $\pmod{3}$ so $p \equiv 1 \pmod{3}$. And similarly if $p \equiv 3 \pmod{4}$ this implies $p$ is a non-quadratic residue $\pmod{p}$ so $p \equiv 2 \pmod{3}$. Hence, any prime divisor $p$ of $2^a-1$ must be $\pm 1\pmod{12}$.

However, if $a$ is even, $2^a-1 \equiv -1 \pmod{4}$ since $a>1$ and $2^a-1 \equiv 1 \pmod{3}$. Hence, we must have $2^a-1 \equiv 7 \pmod{12}$. But if each prime divisor of $2^a-1$ is $\pm 1 \pmod{12}$, $2^a-1$ must also be $\pm 1 \pmod{12}$ which is a clear contradiction. Hence it is impossible to have $a>1$ and $b$ being odd simultaneously which finishes the problem.
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