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k a April Highlights and 2025 AoPS Online Class Information
jlacosta   0
Apr 2, 2025
Spring is in full swing and summer is right around the corner, what are your plans? At AoPS Online our schedule has new classes starting now through July, so be sure to keep your skills sharp and be prepared for the Fall school year! Check out the schedule of upcoming classes below.

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[*]April 22nd (Webinar), 4:00pm PT/7:00pm ET, Competitive Programming at AoPS (USACO).[/list]
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0 replies
jlacosta
Apr 2, 2025
0 replies
My hardest algebra ever created (only one solve in the contest)
mshtand1   6
N 18 minutes ago by mshtand1
Source: Ukraine IMO TST P9
Find all functions \( f: (0, +\infty) \to (0, +\infty) \) for which, for all \( x, y > 0 \), the following identity holds:
\[
f(x) f(yf(x)) + y f(xy) = \frac{f\left(\frac{x}{y}\right)}{y} + \frac{f\left(\frac{y}{x}\right)}{x}
\]
Proposed by Mykhailo Shtandenko
6 replies
mshtand1
Saturday at 9:37 PM
mshtand1
18 minutes ago
Killer NT that nobody solved (also my hardest NT ever created)
mshtand1   4
N 26 minutes ago by mshtand1
Source: Ukraine IMO 2025 TST P8
A positive integer number \( a \) is chosen. Prove that there exists a prime number that divides infinitely many terms of the sequence \( \{b_k\}_{k=1}^{\infty} \), where
\[
b_k = a^{k^k} \cdot 2^{2^k - k} + 1.
\]
Proposed by Arsenii Nikolaev and Mykhailo Shtandenko
4 replies
mshtand1
Saturday at 9:31 PM
mshtand1
26 minutes ago
Advanced topics in Inequalities
va2010   22
N 44 minutes ago by Primeniyazidayi
So a while ago, I compiled some tricks on inequalities. You are welcome to post solutions below!
22 replies
va2010
Mar 7, 2015
Primeniyazidayi
44 minutes ago
Funny easy transcendental geo
qwerty123456asdfgzxcvb   0
2 hours ago
Let $\mathcal{S}$ be a logarithmic spiral centered at the origin (ie curve satisfying for any point $X$ on it, line $OX$ makes a fixed angle with the tangent to $\mathcal{S}$ at $X$). Let $\mathcal{H}$ be a rectangular hyperbola centered at the origin, scaled such that it is tangent to the logarithmic spiral at some point.

Prove that for a point $P$ on the spiral, the polar of $P$ wrt. $\mathcal{H}$ is tangent to the spiral.
0 replies
+2 w
qwerty123456asdfgzxcvb
2 hours ago
0 replies
No more topics!
Five rays in space
April   2
N May 20, 2010 by hendrata01
Source: Vietnam NMO 1987 Problem 6
Prove that among any five distinct rays $ Ox$, $ Oy$, $ Oz$, $ Ot$, $ Or$ in space there exist two which form an angle less than or equal to $ 90^{\circ}$.
2 replies
April
Feb 4, 2009
hendrata01
May 20, 2010
Five rays in space
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Source: Vietnam NMO 1987 Problem 6
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April
1270 posts
#1 • 3 Y
Y by Amir Hossein, Adventure10, Mango247
Prove that among any five distinct rays $ Ox$, $ Oy$, $ Oz$, $ Ot$, $ Or$ in space there exist two which form an angle less than or equal to $ 90^{\circ}$.
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Mij
178 posts
#2 • 3 Y
Y by Amir Hossein, Adventure10, Mango247
We assume for the sake of contradiction that all angles determined by any two of the five rays are greater than $ 90^\circ$.

Consider a sphere centered at $ O$, and let $ Ox,Oy,Oz,Ot,Or$ intersect the sphere at $ x, y, z, t, r$ respectively.
The plane perpendicular to $ Ox$ at $ O$ cuts the sphere into two hemispheres.
Let $ A$ be the hemisphere containing $ x$. $ y$ cannot lie on $ A$, because if it did, the angle $ \angle xOy$ would be less than or equal to $ 90^\circ$.
By the same argument $ z, t, r$ cannot lie on $ A$. Define hemispheres $ B$, $ C$, $ D$, and $ E$ similarly, to contain $ y, z, t, r$, respectively and have similar properties.

Each of the five hemispheres has a measure of $ 2 \pi$ steradians. Because of the assumption, any two hemispheres must overlap at a solid angle of less than $ \pi$ steradians. Let the intersection of $ A$ and $ B$ have measure $ \theta < \pi$.
The union of $ A$ and $ B$ must have measure $ 2\pi + 2\pi - \theta = 4\pi - \theta$, and a complement $ G$ of measure $ 4\pi - (4\pi - \theta) = \theta$, and be bounded by two semi-great-circles that meet at two points, $ p$ and $ q$. The complement $ G$ is contained within what it would be if its measure were its upper bound of $ \pi$.

The intersection of $ G$ and $ C$ has a minimum of $ \dfrac{\theta}{2}$ as $ z$ approaches either $ p$ or $ q$, so it is greater than $ \dfrac{\theta}{2}$. Thus the union of $ A, B, C$ has measure greater than $ (4\pi - \theta) + \dfrac{\theta}{2} = 4\pi - \dfrac{\theta}{2}$, so the complement $ H$ of this union has measure less than $ \dfrac{\theta}{2} < \dfrac{\pi}{2}$ and is contained within what it would be if $ z$ were at $ p$ or $ q$.

$ H$ is contained within what it would be if $ z$ were at $ p$ or $ q$ and, since $ H$ is a subset of $ G$, within what $ H$ would be if $ \theta$ equalled $ \pi$. This would be a $ 90^\circ$-$ 90^\circ$-$ 90^\circ$ spherical triangle, so $ H$ is a subset of a $ 90^\circ$-$ 90^\circ$-$ 90^\circ$ spherical triangle. Since $ t$ and $ r$ must lie on $ H$, and therefore a $ 90^\circ$-$ 90^\circ$-$ 90^\circ$ spherical triangle, $ \angle tOr \le 90^\circ$. We have contradicted our assumption, so we are done.
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hendrata01
280 posts
#3 • 1 Y
Y by Adventure10
This is my solution.

Let $\vec{x}, \vec{y}, \vec{z}, \vec{t}, \vec{r}$ be the the vector in the rays' directions.
We can set up our coordinate system such that, we may assume that all rays start at the origin $O$ and we may assume that $\vec{x} = \vec{k}$, that is pointing straight upwards. So that means the other four vectors must have a negative $z$ component, that is, pointing at the bottom half-space.

Let $P$ be the plane $z = -1$ and let $Y,Z,R,T$ be the intersection of $O_y, O_z, O_r, O_t$ with $P$. These points must exist because all those four rays are pointing "downwards". We now have a pyramid $O.YZRT$ and let $S$ be the point $(0,0,-1)$, that is, the projection of point $O$ onto $S$.

Examine the 2D figure on plane $P$. We have a quadrilateral $YZRT$, and a point $S$. Draw the following four rays: $\vec{SY}, \vec{SZ}, \vec{SR}, \vec{ST}$ all originating from $S$. It's easy to see that two of those rays must form an angle less than or equal to 90 degrees, for the sum of all four angles must equal to 360 degrees.

WLOG, suppose the angle between $\vec{SY}$ and $\vec{SZ}$ is $\theta \leq 90^o$. But not that $SO$ is perpendicular to plane $P$, and hence perpendicular to all vectors on plane $P$.
$\vec{OY} . \vec{OZ} = (\vec {SY} - \vec{SO})(\vec{SZ} - \vec{SO}) = \vec{SY} . \vec{SZ} + SO^2$ because $SO \perp SY, SZ$

But since the angle between $\vec{SY}$ and $\vec{SZ}$ is $\leq 90^o$ then $\vec{SY} . \vec{SZ} \geq 0$ which means $\vec{OY} . \vec{OZ} > 0$, which means that the rays $OY$ and $OZ$ form an acute angle.
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