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Contests & Programs AMC and other contests, summer programs, etc.
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Contests & Programs AMC and other contests, summer programs, etc.
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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.

WOOT early bird pricing is in effect, don’t miss out! If you took MathWOOT Level 2 last year, no worries, it is all new problems this year! Our Worldwide Online Olympiad Training program is for high school level competitors. AoPS designed these courses to help our top students get the deep focus they need to succeed in their specific competition goals. Check out the details at this link for all our WOOT programs in math, computer science, chemistry, and physics.

Looking for summer camps in math and language arts? Be sure to check out the video-based summer camps offered at the Virtual Campus that are 2- to 4-weeks in duration. 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 events:
[list][*]April 3rd (Webinar), 4pm PT/7:00pm ET, Learning with AoPS: Perspectives from a Parent, Math Camp Instructor, and University Professor
[*]April 8th (Math Jam), 4:30pm PT/7:30pm ET, 2025 MATHCOUNTS State Discussion
April 9th (Webinar), 4:00pm PT/7:00pm ET, Learn about Video-based Summer Camps at the Virtual Campus
[*]April 10th (Math Jam), 4:30pm PT/7:30pm ET, 2025 MathILy and MathILy-Er Math Jam: Multibackwards Numbers
[*]April 22nd (Webinar), 4:00pm PT/7:00pm ET, Competitive Programming at AoPS (USACO).[/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.

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Prealgebra 1 Self-Paced

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0 replies
jlacosta
Apr 2, 2025
0 replies
9 RSM or AoPS?
BlazingSun1200   69
N 34 minutes ago by Yihangzh
I'm doing RSM right now, but I want to switch over to AoPS. I'm just curious to know, which do you prefer? (If you have no experience with both, please don't vote!)

If you want, please drop some advice on the Intermediate Algebra class, because that's the one I'm hoping to take!
69 replies
BlazingSun1200
Mar 21, 2021
Yihangzh
34 minutes ago
Discuss the Stanford Math Tournament Here
Aaronjudgeisgoat   237
N an hour ago by Shreyasharma
I believe discussion is allowed after yesterday at midnight, correct?
If so, I will put tentative answers on this thread.
By the way, does anyone know the answer to Geometry Problem 5? I was wondering if I got that one right
Also, if you put answers, please put it in a hide tag

Answers for the Algebra Subject Test
Estimated Algebra Cutoffs
Answers for the Geometry Subject Test
Estimated Geo Cutoffs
Answers for the Discrete Subject Test
Estimated Cutoffs for Discrete
Answers for the Team Round
Guts Answers
237 replies
Aaronjudgeisgoat
Monday at 1:44 PM
Shreyasharma
an hour ago
Columbia Science Honors Program Entrance Exam
am07   2
N an hour ago by SmartGroot
Source: SHP
Hello everyone, I am planning on applying to the Columbia Science Honor Program (SHP) in a year or two and I am trying to see what material is covered on the entrance exam so I can start revising soon. I don't have much of a concern with most of the science topics but I am not sure what kind of math will potentially appear on the test. Will it be traditional school math, SAT math, or even competition math at the AMC or AIME+ level? For anyone who has taken the exam before or has gotten into the program, can someone please elaborate? Thank you.
2 replies
am07
Aug 24, 2023
SmartGroot
an hour ago
How to get good at comp math
fossasor   23
N 2 hours ago by fossasor
I'm a rising ninth grader who wasn't in the school math league this year, and basically put aside comp math for a year. Unfortunately, that means that now that I'm in high school and having the epiphany about how important comp math actually is, and how much it would help my chances of getting involved in other math-related programs. In addition, I do enjoy math in general, and suspect that things like the AMCs are probably going to be some of the best practice I can get. What this all means is that I'm trying to go from mediocre to orz, 2 years after I probably should have started if I wanted to be any good.

So my question is: how do I get good at comp math?

This year, my scores on AMC 10 (and these are the highest I've ever gotten) were a 73.5 and an 82.5 (AMC 8 was 21/25, but that doesn't matter much). This is not good enough to qualify for AIME, and I probably need to raise my performance on each by at least 10 points. I've been decently good in the past at Number Theory, but I need to work on Geo and Combinatorics, and I'm trying to find the best resources to do that. My biggest flaw is probably not knowing many algorithms like Stars and Bars, and the path is clear here (learn them) but I'm still not sure which ones I need to know.

I'm aware that some of this advice is going to be something like "Practice 5 hours a day and start hardgrinding" or something along those lines. Unfortunately, I have other extracurriculars I need to balance, and for me, time is a limiting resource. My parents are somewhat frowning upon me doing a lot of comp math, which limits my time as well. I have neither the time nor motivation to do more than an hour a day, and in practice, I don't think I can be doing that consistently. As such, I would need to make that time count.

I know this is a very general question, and that aops is chock-full of detailed advice for math competitions. However, I'd appreciate it if anyone here could help me out, or show me the best resources I should use to get started. What mocks are any good, or what textbooks should I use? Where do I get the best practice with the shortest time? Is there some place I can find a list of useful formulas that have appeared in math comps before?

All advice is welcome!

23 replies
fossasor
Apr 10, 2025
fossasor
2 hours ago
HMMT Masters Round
rrusczyk   0
Feb 16, 2011
For those of you college students who miss the camaraderie and challenge of on-site math competitions, the Harvard-MIT Math Tournament offers a college competition. Here's a note from Maria Monks and Rishi Gupta, AoPSers who are running the competition:

[quote="Maria Monks and Rishi Gupta"]
The HMMT (Harvard-MIT Math Tournament) Masters Round is an annual math contest for undergraduates, written by former HMMT directors and problem czars. The contest aims to bring the spirit of competition and the art of problem solving into higher mathematics, with challenging problems in abstract algebra, analysis, topology, combinatorics, calculus, linear algebra, and number theory at the undergraduate level. The Masters Round will consist of a 4 hour, proof-based test with 10 questions of varying difficulty.

Any student currently enrolled in an undergraduate institution is eligible to compete, and awards are given to the top 7 undergraduates. Additionally, there will be prizes awarded for particularly clever or elegant solutions. College graduates may also compete, but they will not be eligible for awards.

The team scoring is as follows. Any undergraduate institution with more than five participating undergraduates automatically becomes a team, and that team comprises all the undergraduates from that school. A school's team score is the sum of the ranks of the top 5 individuals from that school, after all non-team participants are removed from the results. Ties are broken by the 6th place individuals from the respective schools.

Problem submissions from college graduates are welcome. Please send any ideas you may have to hmmt-masters@mit.edu. College graduates are also invited to help grade after the contest on April 2, including those who are competing unofficially, and free dinner will be provided for volunteers.

The second annual Masters Round will be held at Harvard University in the Science Center, Hall A, on April 2, 2011. For details and to sign up, please visit http://hmmt.mit.edu/masters. Hope to see you there![/quote]
0 replies
rrusczyk
Feb 16, 2011
0 replies
No more topics!
Permutations Part 1: 2010 USAJMO #1
tenniskidperson3   69
N Apr 2, 2025 by akliu
A permutation of the set of positive integers $[n] = \{1, 2, . . . , n\}$ is a sequence $(a_1 , a_2 , \ldots, a_n ) $ such that each element of $[n]$ appears precisely one time as a term of the sequence. For example, $(3, 5, 1, 2, 4)$ is a permutation of $[5]$. Let $P (n)$ be the number of permutations of $[n]$ for which $ka_k$ is a perfect square for all $1 \leq k \leq n$. Find with proof the smallest $n$ such that $P (n)$ is a multiple of $2010$.
69 replies
tenniskidperson3
Apr 29, 2010
akliu
Apr 2, 2025
Permutations Part 1: 2010 USAJMO #1
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tenniskidperson3
2376 posts
#1 • 10 Y
Y by Smita, dwip_neel, samrocksnature, megarnie, jhu08, son7, Iora, mathmax12, Adventure10, Mango247
A permutation of the set of positive integers $[n] = \{1, 2, . . . , n\}$ is a sequence $(a_1 , a_2 , \ldots, a_n ) $ such that each element of $[n]$ appears precisely one time as a term of the sequence. For example, $(3, 5, 1, 2, 4)$ is a permutation of $[5]$. Let $P (n)$ be the number of permutations of $[n]$ for which $ka_k$ is a perfect square for all $1 \leq k \leq n$. Find with proof the smallest $n$ such that $P (n)$ is a multiple of $2010$.
This post has been edited 2 times. Last edited by tenniskidperson3, Dec 22, 2015, 2:55 AM
Reason: Lolol latex was wrong for 5 years and nobody caught it
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yugrey
2326 posts
#2 • 6 Y
Y by samrocksnature, jhu08, megarnie, son7, Adventure10, Mango247
Look here: http://www.artofproblemsolving.com/Wiki/index.php/USAJMO_2010_Problem_1 I know that there are a lot of things to improve, but I think I got it.
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hrithikguy
1791 posts
#3 • 3 Y
Y by samrocksnature, Adventure10, Mango247
Sorry to revive, but I believe this post is warranted because the USAJMO is coming up very soon, and I would like to know any other possible solutions to this problem. Anyone?
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zero.destroyer
813 posts
#4 • 3 Y
Y by samrocksnature, Adventure10, Mango247
When I first did this problem, I got the exact same solution as well; I don't believe there is another solution.
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mavropnevma
15142 posts
#5 • 10 Y
Y by joey8189681, DrMath, FlakeLCR, Tawan, euleraman271828, myh2910, samrocksnature, Adventure10, Mango247, and 1 other user
See my proof at http://www.artofproblemsolving.com/Forum/viewtopic.php?f=41&t=400185&p=2227412&hilit=permutation#p2227412.
For ease of consultation, I also just paste it below Solution
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BOGTRO
5818 posts
#6 • 3 Y
Y by samrocksnature, Iora, Adventure10
This is how I did it
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theprodigy
581 posts
#7 • 3 Y
Y by samrocksnature, Adventure10, Mango247
@bogtro: that's what i did last year
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supercomputer
491 posts
#8 • 3 Y
Y by samrocksnature, Adventure10, Mango247
If you do it like mavropnevma but don't word it as formally; and definitely no fancy operators. Could you still get a 7 if it is clearly right (exact same argument with different words)
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utkarshgupta
2280 posts
#9 • 6 Y
Y by Wizard_32, MathbugAOPS, samrocksnature, son7, Adventure10, tennisfalcon
Solution
Lemma :
${P(n)= \prod_{k=1}^{n}\lfloor\sqrt{\frac{n}{k}}}\rfloor! $
Proof :

Conclusion
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tastymath75025
3223 posts
#10 • 3 Y
Y by samrocksnature, Adventure10, Mango247
BOGTRO wrote:
Let the numbers 1 to n be divided into sets as follows:

${1, 4, \hdots, a^2}$
${2, 8, \hdots, 2b^2}$
${3, 12, \hdots, 3c^2}$, etc.

Clearly, there are thus

$\lfloor \sqrt{n} \rfloor! \cdot \lfloor \frac{\sqrt{n}}{2} \rfloor! \hdots$ permutations.

Wait.. but isn't ${4, 16, \hdots 4d^2}$ a subset of ${1, 4, \hdots , a^2}$?

How do you account for that

(sorry fhr the revive, but I don't understand)

It should be $\lfloor \sqrt{n} \rfloor! \cdot \lfloor \frac{\sqrt{n}}{2} \rfloor! \hdots$ divided by a ton of terms, right?
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MSTang
6012 posts
#11 • 4 Y
Y by samrocksnature, son7, Adventure10, Mango247
$4, 16, \ldots, 4d^2$ isn't listed - and in fact it isn't a part of BOGTRO's partition. Each of the parts of the partition is the set of all terms of the form $kx^2,$ where $k$ is square-free.
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tastymath75025
3223 posts
#12 • 3 Y
Y by samrocksnature, Adventure10, Mango247
utkarshgupta wrote:
Solution
Lemma :
${P(n)= \prod_{k=1}^{n}\lfloor\sqrt{\frac{n}{k}}}\rfloor! $

@MSTang but in that case, this formula is incorrect, right?
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MSTang
6012 posts
#13 • 7 Y
Y by biomathematics, myh2910, samrocksnature, son7, Upwgs_2008, Adventure10, Mango247
I think so. Rather than $k = 1, 2, 3, \ldots, n,$ the product should be over all square-free integers $k$ from $1$ to $n.$
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electrobrain
101 posts
#14 • 4 Y
Y by samrocksnature, Adventure10, Mango247, Titibuuu
Sorry for the bump, but I feel this problem was worded really weird, this is just my opinion of course. Are most jmo problems worded like this? Am I the only one that feels this way about this problem? If someone could explain this part a little more, that would be very appreciated. Is this hard for a #1?? Thank you in advance.
tenniskidperson3 wrote:
Let $P (n)$ be the number of permutations of $[n]$ for which $ka_k$ is a perfect square for all $1 \leq k \leq n$. Find with proof the smallest $n$ such that $P (n)$ is a multiple of 2010.

EDIT: Ok I think I finally understood the problem phew but it took me about 30 minutes to just understand this :( I would still like to know if I am the only one that felt it was worded weird..
This post has been edited 2 times. Last edited by electrobrain, Jun 29, 2015, 9:13 PM
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v_Enhance
6872 posts
#15 • 5 Y
Y by HamstPan38825, samrocksnature, son7, Adventure10, Mango247
What did you find weird about it? It looks unambiguous to me.
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