Stay ahead of learning milestones! Enroll in a class over the summer!

G
Topic
First Poster
Last Poster
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.

Introductory: Grades 5-10

Prealgebra 1 Self-Paced

Prealgebra 1
Sunday, Apr 13 - Aug 10
Tuesday, May 13 - Aug 26
Thursday, May 29 - Sep 11
Sunday, Jun 15 - Oct 12
Monday, Jun 30 - Oct 20
Wednesday, Jul 16 - Oct 29

Prealgebra 2 Self-Paced

Prealgebra 2
Sunday, Apr 13 - Aug 10
Wednesday, May 7 - Aug 20
Monday, Jun 2 - Sep 22
Sunday, Jun 29 - Oct 26
Friday, Jul 25 - Nov 21

Introduction to Algebra A Self-Paced

Introduction to Algebra A
Monday, Apr 7 - Jul 28
Sunday, May 11 - Sep 14 (1:00 - 2:30 pm ET/10:00 - 11:30 am PT)
Wednesday, May 14 - Aug 27
Friday, May 30 - Sep 26
Monday, Jun 2 - Sep 22
Sunday, Jun 15 - Oct 12
Thursday, Jun 26 - Oct 9
Tuesday, Jul 15 - Oct 28

Introduction to Counting & Probability Self-Paced

Introduction to Counting & Probability
Wednesday, Apr 16 - Jul 2
Thursday, May 15 - Jul 31
Sunday, Jun 1 - Aug 24
Thursday, Jun 12 - Aug 28
Wednesday, Jul 9 - Sep 24
Sunday, Jul 27 - Oct 19

Introduction to Number Theory
Thursday, Apr 17 - Jul 3
Friday, May 9 - Aug 1
Wednesday, May 21 - Aug 6
Monday, Jun 9 - Aug 25
Sunday, Jun 15 - Sep 14
Tuesday, Jul 15 - Sep 30

Introduction to Algebra B Self-Paced

Introduction to Algebra B
Wednesday, Apr 16 - Jul 30
Tuesday, May 6 - Aug 19
Wednesday, Jun 4 - Sep 17
Sunday, Jun 22 - Oct 19
Friday, Jul 18 - Nov 14

Introduction to Geometry
Wednesday, Apr 23 - Oct 1
Sunday, May 11 - Nov 9
Tuesday, May 20 - Oct 28
Monday, Jun 16 - Dec 8
Friday, Jun 20 - Jan 9
Sunday, Jun 29 - Jan 11
Monday, Jul 14 - Jan 19

Intermediate: Grades 8-12

Intermediate Algebra
Monday, Apr 21 - Oct 13
Sunday, Jun 1 - Nov 23
Tuesday, Jun 10 - Nov 18
Wednesday, Jun 25 - Dec 10
Sunday, Jul 13 - Jan 18
Thursday, Jul 24 - Jan 22

Intermediate Counting & Probability
Wednesday, May 21 - Sep 17
Sunday, Jun 22 - Nov 2

Intermediate Number Theory
Friday, Apr 11 - Jun 27
Sunday, Jun 1 - Aug 24
Wednesday, Jun 18 - Sep 3

Precalculus
Wednesday, Apr 9 - Sep 3
Friday, May 16 - Oct 24
Sunday, Jun 1 - Nov 9
Monday, Jun 30 - Dec 8

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
Wednesday, Apr 16 - Jul 2
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
Friday, Apr 11 - Jun 27
Sunday, May 11 - Aug 10
Tuesday, May 27 - Aug 12
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
Sunday, Jun 1 - Aug 24
Thursday, Jun 12 - Aug 28
Tuesday, Jun 17 - Sep 2
Sunday, Jun 22 - Sep 21 (1:00 - 2:30 pm ET/10:00 - 11:30 am PT)
Monday, Jun 23 - Sep 15
Tues & Thurs, Jul 8 - Aug 14 (meets twice a week!)

AMC 10 Final Fives
Sunday, May 11 - Jun 8
Tuesday, May 27 - Jun 17
Monday, Jun 30 - Jul 21

AMC 12 Problem Series
Tuesday, May 27 - Aug 12
Thursday, Jun 12 - Aug 28
Sunday, Jun 22 - Sep 21
Wednesday, Aug 6 - Oct 22

AMC 12 Final Fives
Sunday, May 18 - Jun 15

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
Sunday, Jun 15 - Sep 14 (1:00 - 2:30 pm ET/10:00 - 11:30 am PT)
Tuesday, Jun 17 - Sep 2
Monday, Jun 30 - Sep 22

Intermediate Programming with Python
Sunday, Jun 1 - Aug 24
Monday, Jun 30 - Sep 22

USACO Bronze Problem Series
Tuesday, May 13 - Jul 29
Sunday, Jun 22 - Sep 1

Physics

Introduction to Physics
Wednesday, May 21 - Aug 6
Sunday, Jun 15 - Sep 14
Monday, Jun 23 - Sep 15

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

Relativity
Sat & Sun, Apr 26 - Apr 27 (4:00 - 7:00 pm ET/1:00 - 4:00pm PT)
Mon, Tue, Wed & Thurs, Jun 23 - Jun 26 (meets every day of the week!)
0 replies
jlacosta
Apr 2, 2025
0 replies
Constrained Multivariate Optimization
hesa57   2
N an hour ago by Mathzeus1024
An open box with base $x\times y$ cm in dimensions has height $z$. It costs $3 for each square centimeter of the base and $1 for each square centimeter of the sides. Using Lagrange Multipliers, what is the minimum cost to build the box if the volume has to equal 48 cubic centimeters?

Where I'm Stuck
2 replies
hesa57
Oct 30, 2016
Mathzeus1024
an hour ago
10101...101
CatalystOfNostalgia   14
N an hour ago by Sagnik123Biswas
Source: Putnam
How many base ten integers of the form 1010101...101 are prime?
14 replies
CatalystOfNostalgia
Nov 11, 2007
Sagnik123Biswas
an hour ago
Matrices and Determinants
Saucepan_man02   3
N 3 hours ago by Saucepan_man02
Hello

Can anyone kindly share some problems/handouts on matrices & determinants (problems like Putnam 2004 A3, which are simple to state and doesnt involve heavy theory)?

Thank you..
3 replies
Saucepan_man02
Today at 4:59 AM
Saucepan_man02
3 hours ago
Galois theory
ILOVEMYFAMILY   0
3 hours ago
Prove that there does not exist a positive integer \( n \) such that the \( n \)th cyclotomic field over \( \mathbb{Q} \) is an extension of the field \( \mathbb{Q}(\sqrt[3]{5}) \).
0 replies
ILOVEMYFAMILY
3 hours ago
0 replies
No more topics!
Romanian National Olympiad 1999 - Grade 12 - Problem 4
Filipjack   4
N Mar 29, 2025 by KevinYang2.71
Source: Romanian National Olympiad 1999 - Grade 12 - Problem 4
Let $A$ be an integral domain and $A[X]$ be its associated ring of polynomials. For every integer $n \ge 2$ we define the map $\varphi_n : A[X] \to A[X],$ $\varphi_n(f)=f^n$ and we assume that the set $$M= \Big\{ n \in \mathbb{Z}_{\ge 2} :  \varphi_n \mathrm{~is~an~endomorphism~of~the~ring~} A[X] \Big\}$$is nonempty.

Prove that there exists a unique prime number $p$ such that $M=\{p,p^2,p^3, \ldots\}.$
4 replies
Filipjack
Jan 30, 2025
KevinYang2.71
Mar 29, 2025
Romanian National Olympiad 1999 - Grade 12 - Problem 4
G H J
Source: Romanian National Olympiad 1999 - Grade 12 - Problem 4
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
Filipjack
832 posts
#1
Y by
Let $A$ be an integral domain and $A[X]$ be its associated ring of polynomials. For every integer $n \ge 2$ we define the map $\varphi_n : A[X] \to A[X],$ $\varphi_n(f)=f^n$ and we assume that the set $$M= \Big\{ n \in \mathbb{Z}_{\ge 2} :  \varphi_n \mathrm{~is~an~endomorphism~of~the~ring~} A[X] \Big\}$$is nonempty.

Prove that there exists a unique prime number $p$ such that $M=\{p,p^2,p^3, \ldots\}.$
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
fedjafan
27 posts
#2
Y by
Analyze the cases \operatorname{char}(A)=0 and \operatorname{char}(A)=p where p is a prime. (
/wiki/Integral_domain#Characteristic_and_homomorphisms )
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
ysharifi
1668 posts
#5
Y by
Let $n \in M.$ Then
$$x^n+1=\phi_n(x)+\phi_n(1)=\phi_n(x+1)=(x+1)^n=x^n+1+\sum_{k=1}^{n-1}\binom{n}{k}x^k$$and so
$$\binom{n}{k}1_A=0, \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \\ (*)$$for all $1 \le k \le n-1.$ In particular, $M \ne \emptyset$ implies that the characteristic of $A$ is nonzero. Let $p$ be the characteristic of $A.$ Now, $(*)$ gives
$$p \mid d_n:=\gcd \left \{\binom{n}{1}, \cdots \binom{n}{n-1} \right \}.$$But it is a well-known fact (see here for a proof) that $d_n > 1$ if and only if $n=q^m$ for some integer $m \ge 1$ and some prime number $q,$ in which case $d_n=q.$ So $p \mid q$ hence $q=p$ and $n=p^m.$

The converse is trivial, that is, it's clear that if $n=p^m$ for some integer $m \ge 1,$ then $n \in M.$
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
ysharifi
1668 posts
#7
Y by
In fact, the result given in your problem holds for any infinite domain not just polynomial rings over domains. Let $R$ be an infinite domain. Let $n \ge 2$ be an integer and suppose that the map $f: R \to R$ defined by $f(a)=a^n, \ a \in R,$ is a ring homomorphism. Then $2^n=f(2)=2f(1)=2$ and so $(2^n-2)1_R=0$ implying that the characteristic of $R$ is a prime number, say $p.$ So $R$ contains a copy of $\mathbb{Z}_p.$ Now consider the polynomial $$g(x):=(1+x)^n-1-x^n=\sum_{k=1}^{n-1}\binom{n}{k}x^k \in \mathbb{Z}_p[x].$$Then for any $a \in R,$
$$g(a)=(1+a)^n-1-a^n=f(1+a)-f(1)-f(a)=0$$and so every element of $R$ is a root of $g.$ Thus $g=0$ because $R$ is not finite. So $p \mid \binom{n}{k}$ for all positive integers $k \le n-1$ and hence, by the link in my previous post, $n=p^m$ for some positive integer $m.$
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
KevinYang2.71
411 posts
#9
Y by
Actually $A$ being a domain is not needed.

Claim. If the characteristic of $A$ is a prime $p$, then $M$ is in the desired form.
Proof. All powers of $p$ are in $M$ due to freshman's dream.

If $n\in M$, let $q$ be the largest power of $p$ dividing $n$ so $\binom{n}{q}$ is relatively prime with $p$. Considering $(1+x)^n=1+x^n$, we get $n=q$, as desired. $\square$

For $n\in M$, from $(1+x)^n=1+x^n$ we deduce that the characteristic of $A$ is nonzero, say $m$. Taking reduction of $A[x]$ mod $p$ for a prime factor $p\mid m$ yields that all elements in $M$ are a power of $p$. Hence $m$ has only one prime factor so it is a power of $p$. Suppose $p^\alpha\in M$ for some positive integer $\alpha$. Since $\binom{p^\alpha}{p^{\alpha-1}}$ has $p$-adic valuation equal to $1$, it is nonzero if $m\neq p$. This is a contradiction by considering $(1+x)^{p^\alpha}=1+x^{p^\alpha}$. Thus $m=p$ and the Claim finishes. $\square$
This post has been edited 2 times. Last edited by KevinYang2.71, Mar 29, 2025, 7:28 AM
Z K Y
N Quick Reply
G
H
=
a