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k a March Highlights and 2025 AoPS Online Class Information
jlacosta   0
Mar 2, 2025
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0 replies
jlacosta
Mar 2, 2025
0 replies
Colouring numbers
kitun   2
N a minute ago by quasar_lord
What is the least number required to colour the integers $1, 2,.....,2^{n}-1$ such that for any set of consecutive integers taken from the given set of integers, there will always be a colour colouring exactly one of them? That is, for all integers $i, j$ such that $1<=i<=j<=2^{n}-1$, there will be a colour coloring exactly one integer from the set $i, i+1,.... , j-1, j$.
2 replies
kitun
Nov 15, 2021
quasar_lord
a minute ago
Mathhhhh
mathbetter   4
N 3 minutes ago by Amkan2022
Three turtles are crawling along a straight road heading in the same
direction. "Two other turtles are behind me," says the first turtle. "One turtle is
behind me and one other is ahead," says the second. "Two turtles are ahead of me
and one other is behind," says the third turtle. How can this be possible?
4 replies
mathbetter
Yesterday at 11:21 AM
Amkan2022
3 minutes ago
Finally hard NT on UKR MO from NT master
mshtand1   3
N 17 minutes ago by Jupiterballs
Source: Ukrainian Mathematical Olympiad 2025. Day 1, Problem 11.4
A pair of positive integer numbers \((a, b)\) is given. It turns out that for every positive integer number \(n\), for which the numbers \((n - a)(n + b)\) and \(n^2 - ab\) are positive, they have the same number of divisors. Is it necessarily true that \(a = b\)?

Proposed by Oleksii Masalitin
3 replies
mshtand1
Mar 13, 2025
Jupiterballs
17 minutes ago
Inspired by my own results
sqing   2
N 26 minutes ago by lbh_qys
Source: Own
Let $ a,b,c\geq 2.$ Prove that
$$ (a+1)(b+2)(c +1)-3 abc\leq 12$$$$ (a+1)(b+2)(c +1)-\frac{7}{2}abc\leq  8$$$$ (a+1)(b+3)(c +1)-\frac{15}{4}abc\leq  15$$$$ (a+1)(b+3)(c +1)-4abc\leq  13$$
2 replies
sqing
2 hours ago
lbh_qys
26 minutes ago
No more topics!
The number of ways is divisible by 101
VicKmath7   3
N Nov 19, 2023 by Assassino9931
Source: Bulgarian Autumn Tournament 2023, 10.4
In every cell of a board $101 \times 101$ is written a positive integer. For any choice of $101$ cells from different rows and columns, their sum is divisible by $101$. Show that the number of ways to choose a cell from each row of the board, so that the total sum of the numbers in the chosen cells is divisible by $101$, is divisible by $101$.
3 replies
VicKmath7
Nov 19, 2023
Assassino9931
Nov 19, 2023
The number of ways is divisible by 101
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Source: Bulgarian Autumn Tournament 2023, 10.4
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VicKmath7
1385 posts
#1
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In every cell of a board $101 \times 101$ is written a positive integer. For any choice of $101$ cells from different rows and columns, their sum is divisible by $101$. Show that the number of ways to choose a cell from each row of the board, so that the total sum of the numbers in the chosen cells is divisible by $101$, is divisible by $101$.
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oVlad
1721 posts
#2
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Index the rows and columns from 0 to 100. We shall only work modulo 101 in what follows. Observe that we may let $(0,0)=0$ by adding some constant to all the terms of the table. Next, because of the condition in the statement, \[(u,v)+(i,j)=(u,j)+(i,v),\]for any $u,v,i,j.$ Thus, there exist $a_0=0,a_1,\ldots,a_{100}$ and $b_0=0,b_1,\ldots,b_{100}$ so that $(i,j)=a_i+b_j.$ Now, letting $\Sigma_a$ and $\Sigma_b$ be the sum of the $a_i$ and the $b_i$ resepctively, the condition in the statement then yields $\Sigma_a+\Sigma_b=0.$ Note that \[\sum_{i=0}^{100}x^{101b_i}=\left(\sum_{i=1}^{100}x^{b_i}\right)^{101}:=\sum_{i=0}^\infty x^i\alpha(i).\]Observe that the number of ways of adequately choosing one cell from each row correspoonds to the number of 101-tuples with values from $\{b_0,b_1,\ldots,b_{100}\}$ with sum equal to $\Sigma_b$ that is $\alpha(\Sigma_b)+\alpha(101+\Sigma_b)+\cdots.$

Using the fact that 101 is prime and computing the latter expression for $x=\exp(2\pi i/101)$ we get the desired\[0=\sum_{i=0}^\infty\alpha\left(101i+\Sigma_b\right).\]
This post has been edited 2 times. Last edited by oVlad, Nov 20, 2023, 1:01 PM
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IAmTheHazard
5000 posts
#3
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I will actually show that if the sum of any $101$ cells from different rows and columns is fixed (i.e. doesn't depend on the choice of cells) modulo $101$, then the number of ways to select a cell from each row of the board such that the sum is congruent to a (possibly different) fixed residue $r$ modulo $101$ is divisible by $101$.

Index the rows and columns $0$ through $101$ and let $a_{x,y}$ denote the number at $(x,y)$ (the first coordinate is row number). We now work entirely in $\mathbb{F}_{101}$ (and relevant extensions)—note that $101$ is prime. By shifting all the entries by the same constant, assume $a_{0,0}=0$. Because of the given condition, we have $a_{p,q}+a_{r,s}=a_{p,s}+a_{r,q}$. Thus the rest of the grid is uniquely determined by row and column $0$; in particular, $a_{i,j}=a_{i,0}+a_{0,j}$.

Now consider the generating function "of row $0$", which is
$$F(x):=\sum_{j=0}^{100} x^{a_{0,j}}.$$Because $a_{i,j}=a_{i,0}+a_{0,j}$, the generating function "of row $i$" is thus
$$\sum_{j=0}^{100} x^{a_{i,0}+a_{0,j}}=x^{a_{i,0}}F(x).$$
If we multiply all the row generating functions, the number of ways to select an element of each row such that the chosen elements sum to $r$ is simply the sum of the coefficients of terms whose exponent is $r \pmod{101}$. On the other hand, letting $s=a_{0,0}+\cdots+a_{100,0}$, this product is just
$$x^sF(x)^{101}=x^sF(x^{101})=x^s\sum_{j=0}^{100} x^{101a_{0,j}},$$by Frobenius Endomorphism/binomial theorem. If $r \neq s$ then we don't get any (nonzero) terms at all and this sum is thus $0$. If $r=s$ then the coefficient sum is just $\underbrace{1+\cdots+1}_{101\text{ ones}}=0$, so we're done in both cases. $\blacksquare$
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Assassino9931
1198 posts
#4
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Proposed by the legend Borislav Kirilov . There is a natural combinatorial solution as well - after obtaining \[(u,v)+(i,j)=(u,j)+(i,v),\]as well as $(i,j)=a_i+b_j,$ when computing the sum of numbers in different rows, we see that it is $\sum a_i + \sum d_ib_i$ where $d_i$ is the number of cells in column $i$ among the $p$ chosen ones and hence it depends entirely on $(d_1,d_2,\ldots,d_p)$. For any such tuple there are Multinomial($p;d_1,\ldots,d_p$) possible collections of cells with this property and if at least two $d_i$ are non-zero, then it is a multiple of the prime $p = 101$. (The case where only one $d_i = p$ is non-zero corresponds to cells in the same column and is checked easily separately.)
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