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Contests & Programs AMC and other contests, summer programs, etc.
AMC and other contests, summer programs, etc.
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Contests & Programs AMC and other contests, summer programs, etc.
AMC and other contests, summer programs, etc.
3 M G
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k a My Retirement & New Leadership at AoPS
rrusczyk   1571
N Wednesday at 11:40 PM by SmartGroot
I write today to announce my retirement as CEO from Art of Problem Solving. When I founded AoPS 22 years ago, I never imagined that we would reach so many students and families, or that we would find so many channels through which we discover, inspire, and train the great problem solvers of the next generation. I am very proud of all we have accomplished and I’m thankful for the many supporters who provided inspiration and encouragement along the way. I'm particularly grateful to all of the wonderful members of the AoPS Community!

I’m delighted to introduce our new leaders - Ben Kornell and Andrew Sutherland. Ben has extensive experience in education and edtech prior to joining AoPS as my successor as CEO, including starting like I did as a classroom teacher. He has a deep understanding of the value of our work because he’s an AoPS parent! Meanwhile, Andrew and I have common roots as founders of education companies; he launched Quizlet at age 15! His journey from founder to MIT to technology and product leader as our Chief Product Officer traces a pathway many of our students will follow in the years to come.

Thank you again for your support for Art of Problem Solving and we look forward to working with millions more wonderful problem solvers in the years to come.

And special thanks to all of the amazing AoPS team members who have helped build AoPS. We’ve come a long way from here:IMAGE
1571 replies
rrusczyk
Mar 24, 2025
SmartGroot
Wednesday at 11:40 PM
k a March Highlights and 2025 AoPS Online Class Information
jlacosta   0
Mar 2, 2025
March is the month for State MATHCOUNTS competitions! Kudos to everyone who participated in their local chapter competitions and best of luck to all going to State! Join us on March 11th for a Math Jam devoted to our favorite Chapter competition problems! Are you interested in training for MATHCOUNTS? Be sure to check out our AMC 8/MATHCOUNTS Basics and Advanced courses.

Are you ready to level up with Olympiad training? Registration is open with early bird pricing available for our WOOT programs: MathWOOT (Levels 1 and 2), CodeWOOT, PhysicsWOOT, and ChemWOOT. What is WOOT? WOOT stands for Worldwide Online Olympiad Training and is a 7-month high school math Olympiad preparation and testing program that brings together many of the best students from around the world to learn Olympiad problem solving skills. Classes begin in September!

Do you have plans this summer? There are so many options to fit your schedule and goals whether attending a summer camp or taking online classes, it can be a great break from the routine of the school year. Check out our summer courses at AoPS Online, or if you want a math or language arts class that doesn’t have homework, but is an enriching summer experience, our AoPS Virtual Campus summer camps may be just the ticket! We are expanding our locations for our AoPS Academies across the country with 15 locations so far and new campuses opening in Saratoga CA, Johns Creek GA, and the Upper West Side NY. Check out this page for summer camp information.

Be sure to mark your calendars for the following events:
[list][*]March 5th (Wednesday), 4:30pm PT/7:30pm ET, HCSSiM Math Jam 2025. Amber Verser, Assistant Director of the Hampshire College Summer Studies in Mathematics, will host an information session about HCSSiM, a summer program for high school students.
[*]March 6th (Thursday), 4:00pm PT/7:00pm ET, Free Webinar on Math Competitions from elementary through high school. Join us for an enlightening session that demystifies the world of math competitions and helps you make informed decisions about your contest journey.
[*]March 11th (Tuesday), 4:30pm PT/7:30pm ET, 2025 MATHCOUNTS Chapter Discussion MATH JAM. AoPS instructors will discuss some of their favorite problems from the MATHCOUNTS Chapter Competition. All are welcome!
[*]March 13th (Thursday), 4:00pm PT/7:00pm ET, Free Webinar about Summer Camps at the Virtual Campus. Transform your summer into an unforgettable learning adventure! From elementary through high school, we offer dynamic summer camps featuring topics in mathematics, language arts, and competition preparation - all designed to fit your schedule and ignite your passion for learning.[/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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0 replies
jlacosta
Mar 2, 2025
0 replies
k i Adding contests to the Contest Collections
dcouchman   1
N Apr 5, 2023 by v_Enhance
Want to help AoPS remain a valuable Olympiad resource? Help us add contests to AoPS's Contest Collections.

Find instructions and a list of contests to add here: https://artofproblemsolving.com/community/c40244h1064480_contests_to_add
1 reply
dcouchman
Sep 9, 2019
v_Enhance
Apr 5, 2023
k i Zero tolerance
ZetaX   49
N May 4, 2019 by NoDealsHere
Source: Use your common sense! (enough is enough)
Some users don't want to learn, some other simply ignore advises.
But please follow the following guideline:


To make it short: ALWAYS USE YOUR COMMON SENSE IF POSTING!
If you don't have common sense, don't post.


More specifically:

For new threads:


a) Good, meaningful title:
The title has to say what the problem is about in best way possible.
If that title occured already, it's definitely bad. And contest names aren't good either.
That's in fact a requirement for being able to search old problems.

Examples:
Bad titles:
- "Hard"/"Medium"/"Easy" (if you find it so cool how hard/easy it is, tell it in the post and use a title that tells us the problem)
- "Number Theory" (hey guy, guess why this forum's named that way¿ and is it the only such problem on earth¿)
- "Fibonacci" (there are millions of Fibonacci problems out there, all posted and named the same...)
- "Chinese TST 2003" (does this say anything about the problem¿)
Good titles:
- "On divisors of a³+2b³+4c³-6abc"
- "Number of solutions to x²+y²=6z²"
- "Fibonacci numbers are never squares"


b) Use search function:
Before posting a "new" problem spend at least two, better five, minutes to look if this problem was posted before. If it was, don't repost it. If you have anything important to say on topic, post it in one of the older threads.
If the thread is locked cause of this, use search function.

Update (by Amir Hossein). The best way to search for two keywords in AoPS is to input
[code]+"first keyword" +"second keyword"[/code]
so that any post containing both strings "first word" and "second form".


c) Good problem statement:
Some recent really bad post was:
[quote]$lim_{n\to 1}^{+\infty}\frac{1}{n}-lnn$[/quote]
It contains no question and no answer.
If you do this, too, you are on the best way to get your thread deleted. Write everything clearly, define where your variables come from (and define the "natural" numbers if used). Additionally read your post at least twice before submitting. After you sent it, read it again and use the Edit-Button if necessary to correct errors.


For answers to already existing threads:


d) Of any interest and with content:
Don't post things that are more trivial than completely obvious. For example, if the question is to solve $x^{3}+y^{3}=z^{3}$, do not answer with "$x=y=z=0$ is a solution" only. Either you post any kind of proof or at least something unexpected (like "$x=1337, y=481, z=42$ is the smallest solution). Someone that does not see that $x=y=z=0$ is a solution of the above without your post is completely wrong here, this is an IMO-level forum.
Similar, posting "I have solved this problem" but not posting anything else is not welcome; it even looks that you just want to show off what a genius you are.

e) Well written and checked answers:
Like c) for new threads, check your solutions at least twice for mistakes. And after sending, read it again and use the Edit-Button if necessary to correct errors.



To repeat it: ALWAYS USE YOUR COMMON SENSE IF POSTING!


Everything definitely out of range of common sense will be locked or deleted (exept for new users having less than about 42 posts, they are newbies and need/get some time to learn).

The above rules will be applied from next monday (5. march of 2007).
Feel free to discuss on this here.
49 replies
ZetaX
Feb 27, 2007
NoDealsHere
May 4, 2019
Red Mop Chances
imagien_bad   41
N 24 minutes ago by deduck
What are my chances of making red mop with a 35 on jmo?
41 replies
2 viewing
imagien_bad
Mar 22, 2025
deduck
24 minutes ago
AMC 10/AIME Study Forum
PatTheKing806   36
N 43 minutes ago by yaxuan
[center]

Me (PatTheKing806) and EaZ_Shadow have created a AMC 10/AIME Study Forum! Hopefully, this forum wont die quickly. To signup, do /join or \join.

Click here to join! (or do some pushups) :P

People should join this forum if they are wanting to do well on the AMC 10 next year, trying get into AIME, or loves math!
36 replies
PatTheKing806
Yesterday at 11:34 PM
yaxuan
43 minutes ago
Thanks u!
Ruji2018252   6
N an hour ago by jasperE3
Find all $f:\mathbb{R}\to\mathbb{R}$ and
\[f(x)+f(x^2+2x)=x^2+3x+4046,\forall x\in\mathbb{R}\]
6 replies
Ruji2018252
3 hours ago
jasperE3
an hour ago
A_1, M,Q,P lie on a circle
ts0_9   19
N an hour ago by Ilikeminecraft
Source: Kazakhstan 2011 grade 9
Given a non-degenerate triangle $ABC$, let $A_{1}, B_{1}, C_{1}$ be the point of tangency of the incircle with the sides $BC, AC, AB$. Let $Q$ and $L$ be the intersection of the segment $AA_{1}$ with the incircle and the segment $B_{1}C_{1}$ respectively. Let $M$ be the midpoint of $B_{1}C_{1}$. Let $T$ be the point of intersection of $BC$ and $B_{1}C_{1}$. Let $P$ be the foot of the perpendicular from the point $L$ on the line $AT$. Prove that the points $A_{1}, M, Q, P$ lie on a circle.
19 replies
ts0_9
May 25, 2012
Ilikeminecraft
an hour ago
Iranian tough nut: AA', BN, CM concur in Gergonne picture
grobber   68
N an hour ago by Ilikeminecraft
Source: Iranian olympiad/round 3/2002
Let $ABC$ be a triangle. The incircle of triangle $ABC$ touches the side $BC$ at $A^{\prime}$, and the line $AA^{\prime}$ meets the incircle again at a point $P$. Let the lines $CP$ and $BP$ meet the incircle of triangle $ABC$ again at $N$ and $M$, respectively. Prove that the lines $AA^{\prime}$, $BN$ and $CM$ are concurrent.
68 replies
grobber
Dec 29, 2003
Ilikeminecraft
an hour ago
EGMO Genre Predictions
ohiorizzler1434   1
N an hour ago by sixoneeight
Everybody, with EGMO upcoming, what are you predictions for the problem genres?


Personally I predict: predict
1 reply
ohiorizzler1434
2 hours ago
sixoneeight
an hour ago
inequality with natural parameters
jasperE3   4
N 2 hours ago by ohiorizzler1434
Source: S&M 2002 3&4th Grade P1
For any positive numbers $a,b,c$ and natural numbers $n,k$ prove the inequality
$$\frac{a^{n+k}}{b^n}+\frac{b^{n+k}}{c^n}+\frac{c^{n+k}}{a^n}\ge a^k+b^k+c^k.$$
4 replies
jasperE3
May 15, 2021
ohiorizzler1434
2 hours ago
[Registration Open] Gunn Math Competition is BACK!!!
the_math_prodigy   14
N 2 hours ago by mdk2013
Source: compete.gunnmathcircle.org
IMAGE

Gunn Math Competition will take place at Gunn High School in Palo Alto, California on THIS Sunday, March 30th. Gather a team of up to four and compete for over $7,500 in prizes! The deadline to sign up is March 27th. We welcome participants of all skill levels, with separate Beginner and Advanced (AIME) divisions for all students, from advanced 4th graders to 12th graders.

For more information, check our website, [url][/url]compete.gunnmathcircle.org, where registration is free and now open. The deadline to sign up is this Friday, March 28th. If you are unable to make a team, register as an individual and we will be able to create teams for you.

Special Guest Speaker: Po-Shen LohIMAGE
We are honored to welcome Po-Shen Loh, a world-renowned mathematician, Carnegie Mellon professor, and former coach of the USA International Math Olympiad team. He will deliver a several 30-minute talks to both students and parents, offering deep insights into mathematical thinking and problem-solving in the age of AI!

For any questions, reach out at ghsmathcircle@gmail.com or ask in our Discord server, which you can join through the website.

Find information on our AoPS page too! https://artofproblemsolving.com/wiki/index.php/Gunn_Math_Competition_(GMC)
Thank you to our sponsors for making this possible!
IMAGE

Check out our flyer! IMAGE
14 replies
the_math_prodigy
Mar 24, 2025
mdk2013
2 hours ago
3 var inquality
sqing   2
N 2 hours ago by sqing
Source: Own
Let $ a,b,c  $ be reals . Prove that
$$ a^2+ b^2 +c^2+ab+\frac{1}{2}bc+ca+\frac{5}{4}\geq  \sqrt{3} (a+b+c)$$$$ a^2+ b^2 +c^2+ab+\frac{3}{2}bc+ca+\frac{7}{10}\geq  \sqrt{2} (a+b+c)$$$$ a^2+ b^2 +c^2+ab+2bc+ca+1\geq  \sqrt{3} (a+b+c)$$
2 replies
sqing
2 hours ago
sqing
2 hours ago
Practice AMC 10A
freddyfazbear   50
N 2 hours ago by freddyfazbear
Hey everyone!

I’m back with another practice test. Sorry this one took a while to pump out since I have been busy lately.

Post your score/distribution, favorite problems, and thoughts on the difficulty of the test down below. Hope you enjoy!


Practice AMC 10A

1. Find the sum of the infinite geometric series 1/2 + 7/36 + 49/648 + …
A - 18/11, B - 9/22, C - 9/11, D - 18/7, E - 9/14

2. What is the first digit after the decimal point in the square root of 420?
A - 1, B - 2, C - 3, D - 4, E - 5

3. Caden’s calculator is broken and two of the digits are swapped for some reason. When he entered in 9 + 10, he got 21. What is the sum of the two digits that got swapped?
A - 2, B - 3, C - 4, D - 5, E - 6

4. Two circles with radiuses 47 and 96 intersect at two points A and B. Let P be the point 82% of the way from A to B. A line is drawn through P that intersects both circles twice. Let the four intersection points, from left to right be W, X, Y, and Z. Find (PW/PX)*(PY/PZ).
A - 50/5863, B - 47/96, C - 1, D - 96/47, E - 5863/50

5. Two dice are rolled, and the two numbers shown are a and b. How many possible values of ab are there?
A - 17, B - 18, C - 19, D - 20, E - 21

6. What is the largest positive integer that cannot be expressed in the form 6a + 9b + 4c + 20d, where a, b, c, and d are positive integers?
A - 29, B - 38, C - 43, D - 76, E - 82

7. What is the absolute difference of the probabilities of getting at least 6/10 on a 10-question true or false test and at least 3/5 on a 5-question true or false test?
A - 0, B - 1/504, C - 1/252, D - 1/126, E - 1/63

8. How many arrangements of the letters in the word “ginger” are there such that the two vowels have an even number of letters (remember 0 is even) between them (including the original “ginger”)?
A - 72, B - 108, C - 144, D - 216, E - 432

9. After opening his final exam, Jason does not know how to solve a single question. So he decides to pull out his phone and search up the answers. Doing this, Jason has a success rate of anywhere from 94-100% for any given question he uses his phone on. However, if the teacher sees his phone at any point during the test, then Jason gets a 0.5 multiplier on his final test score, as well as he must finish the rest of the test questions without his phone. (Assume Jason uses his phone on every question he does until he finishes the test or gets caught.) Every question is a 5-choice multiple choice question. Jason has a 90% chance of not being caught with his phone. What is the expected value of Jason’s test score, rounded to the nearest tenth of a percent?
A - 89.9%, B - 90.0%, C - 90.1%, D - 90.2%, E - 90.3%

10. A criminal is caught by a police officer. Due to a lack of cooperation, the officer calls in a second officer so they can start the arrest smoothly. Officer 1 takes 26:18 to arrest a criminal, and officer 2 takes 13:09 to arrest a criminal. With these two police officers working together, how long should the arrest take?
A - 4:23, B - 5:26, C - 8:46, D - 17:32, E - 19:44

11. Suppose that on the coordinate grid, the x-axis represents economic freedom, and the y-axis represents social freedom, where -1 <= x, y <= 1 and a higher number for either coordinate represents more freedom along that particular axis. Accordingly, the points (0, 0), (1, 1), (-1, 1), (-1, -1), and (1, -1) represent democracy, anarchy, socialism, communism, and fascism, respectively. A country is classified as whichever point it is closest to. Suppose a theoretical new country is selected by picking a random point within the square bounded by anarchy, socialism, communism, and fascism as its vertices. What is the probability that it is fascist?
A - 1 - (1/4)pi, B - 1/5, C - (1/16)pi, D - 1/4, E - 1/8

12. Statistics show that people in Memphis who eat at KFC n days a week have a (1/10)(n+2) chance of liking kool-aid, and the number of people who eat at KFC n days a week is directly proportional to 8 - n (Note that n can only be an integer from 0 to 7, inclusive). A random person in Memphis is selected. Find the probability that they like kool-aid.
A - 13/30, B - 17/30, C - 19/30, D - 23/30, E - 29/30

13. PM me for problem (I don’t want to post it on here again because apparently a “sheriff” got rid of it)
A - 51, B - 52, C - 53, D - 54, E - 55

14. Find the number of positive integers n less than 69 such that the average of all the squares from 1^2 to n^2, inclusive, is an integer.
A - 11, B - 12, C - 23, D - 24, E - 48

15. Find the number of ordered pairs (a, b) of integers such that (a - b)^2 = 625 - 2ab.
A - 6, B - 10, C - 12, D - 16, E - 20

16. What is the 420th digit after the decimal point in the decimal expansion of 1/13?
A - 4, B - 5, C - 6, D - 7, E - 8

17. Two congruent towers stand near each other. Both take the shape of a right rectangular prism. A plane that cuts both towers into two pieces passes through the vertical axes of symmetry of both towers and does not cross the floor or roof of either tower. Let the point that the plane crosses the axis of symmetry of the first tower be A, and the point that the plane crosses the axis of symmetry of the second tower be B. A is 81% of the way from the floor to the roof of the first tower, and B is 69% of the way from the floor to the roof of the second tower. What percent of the total mass of both towers combined is above the plane?
A - 19%, B - 25%, C - 50%, D - 75%, E - 81%

18. What is the greatest number of positive integer factors an integer from 1 to 100 can have?
A - 10, B - 12, C - 14, D - 15, E - 16

19. On an analog clock, the minute hand makes one full revolution every hour, and the hour hand makes one full revolution every 12 hours. Both hands move at a constant rate. During which of the following time periods does the minute hand pass the hour hand?
A - 7:35 - 7:36, B - 7:36 - 7:37, C - 7:37 - 7:38, D - 7:38 - 7:39, E - 7:39 - 7:40

20. Find the smallest positive integer that is a leg in three different Pythagorean triples.
A - 12, B - 14, C - 15, D - 20, E - 21

21. How many axes of symmetry does the graph of (x^2)(y^2) = 69 have?
A - 2, B - 3, C - 4, D - 5, E - 6

22. Real numbers a, b, and c are chosen uniformly and at random from 0 to 3. Find the probability that a + b + c is less than 2.
A - 4/81, B - 8/81, C - 4/27, D - 8/27, E - 2/3

23. Let f(n) be the sum of the positive integer divisors of n. Find the sum of the digits of the smallest odd positive integer n such that f(n) is greater than 2n.
A - 15, B - 18, C - 21, D - 24, E - 27

24. Find the last three digits of 24^10.
A - 376, B - 576, C - 626, D - 876, E - 926

25. A basketball has a diameter of 9 inches, and the hoop has a diameter of 18 inches. Peter decides to pick up the basketball and make a throw. Given that Peter has a 1/4 chance of accidentally hitting the backboard and missing the shot, but if he doesn’t, he is guaranteed that the frontmost point of the basketball will be within 18 inches of the center of the hoop at the moment when a great circle of the basketball crosses the plane containing the rim. No part of the ball will extend behind the backboard at any point during the throw, and the rim is attached directly to the backboard. What is the probability that Peter makes a green FN?
A - 3/128, B - 3/64, C - 3/32, D - 3/16, E - 3/8
50 replies
freddyfazbear
Mar 24, 2025
freddyfazbear
2 hours ago
hard problem
Cobedangiu   12
N 3 hours ago by sqing
problem
12 replies
Cobedangiu
Yesterday at 2:54 PM
sqing
3 hours ago
Rational numbers
steven_zhang123   2
N 3 hours ago by internationalnick123456
Source: G635
Find all positive real numbers \( \alpha \) such that there exist infinitely many rational numbers \( \frac{p}{q} (p, q \in \mathbb{Z}, p > 0, \gcd(p, q) = 1 ) \) satisfying

\[
\left| \frac{q}{p} - \frac{\sqrt{5} - 1}{2} \right| < \frac{\alpha}{p^2}.
\]
2 replies
steven_zhang123
Yesterday at 1:24 PM
internationalnick123456
3 hours ago
Inspired by old results
sqing   3
N 3 hours ago by sqing
Source: Own
Let $ a,b,c > 0 $ and $ a+b+c +abc =4. $ Prove that
$$ a^2 + b^2 + c^2 + 3 \geq 2( ab+bc + ca )$$Let $ a,b,c > 0 $ and $  ab+bc+ca+abc=4. $ Prove that
$$ a^2 + b^2 + c^2 + 2abc \geq  5$$
3 replies
sqing
Yesterday at 12:35 PM
sqing
3 hours ago
Surjectivity such that f(x) = 0
KHOMNYO2   1
N 3 hours ago by internationalnick123456
Determine all integer $k$ with this property: For every non-constant function $f : \mathbb{Z} \rightarrow \mathbb{Z}$ that satisfy
$$f(f(x) + f(y)) + f(x+y) = 0$$for every integers $x,y$, there exists an integer $n$ (that depends on choice of $f$) such that $f(n) = k$

I need help/fresh approach on whether the family of the solution function is surjective such that there always exist x so f(x) = 0 or not
1 reply
KHOMNYO2
4 hours ago
internationalnick123456
3 hours ago
Anyone LFT for SMT?
Mathdreams   0
Mar 21, 2025
Hi everyone,

Is there anyone willing to join an SMT (Stanford Math Tournament) team?

I have a team looking for one more person.

Edit: If you are interested, please PM me, and I'll answer any questions there :)
0 replies
Mathdreams
Mar 21, 2025
0 replies
Anyone LFT for SMT?
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Mathdreams
1434 posts
#1
Y by
Hi everyone,

Is there anyone willing to join an SMT (Stanford Math Tournament) team?

I have a team looking for one more person.

Edit: If you are interested, please PM me, and I'll answer any questions there :)
This post has been edited 1 time. Last edited by Mathdreams, Mar 21, 2025, 2:28 AM
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