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k a May Highlights and 2025 AoPS Online Class Information
jlacosta   0
May 1, 2025
May is an exciting month! National MATHCOUNTS is the second week of May in Washington D.C. and our Founder, Richard Rusczyk will be presenting a seminar, Preparing Strong Math Students for College and Careers, on May 11th.

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[*]May 21st, 4:00pm PT/7:00pm ET, Mathcamp 2025 Qualifying Quiz Part 2 Math Jam, Problems 5 and 6, Canada/USA Mathcamp staff will discuss solutions to Problems 5 and 6 of the 2025 Mathcamp Qualifying Quiz![/list]
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0 replies
jlacosta
May 1, 2025
0 replies
Linear algebra
Feynmann123   2
N 39 minutes ago by Feynmann123
Hi everyone,

I was wondering whether when I tried to compute e^(2x2 matrix) and got the expansions of sinx and cosx with the method of discounting the constant junk whether it plays any significance. I am a UK student and none of this is in my School syllabus so I was just wondering…


2 replies
Feynmann123
41 minutes ago
Feynmann123
39 minutes ago
prove that
luckvoltia.112   1
N an hour ago by anduran
Let \( a, b, c \) be non-negative real numbers such that \( a + b + c > 0 \) and
\[
\frac{25a + 36b + 49c}{5a + 6b + 7c} + \frac{25b + 36c + 49a}{5b + 6c + 7a} + \frac{25c + 36a + 49b}{5c + 6a + 7b} = 18.
\]Prove that exactly two of the numbers \( a, b, c \) are equal to 0.
1 reply
luckvoltia.112
Today at 12:52 AM
anduran
an hour ago
2022 SMT Team Round - Stanford Math Tournament
parmenides51   6
N an hour ago by vanstraelen
p1. Square $ABCD$ has side length $2$. Let the midpoint of $BC$ be $E$. What is the area of the overlapping region between the circle centered at $E$ with radius $1$ and the circle centered at $D$ with radius $2$? (You may express your answer using inverse trigonometry functions of noncommon values.)


p2. Find the number of times $f(x) = 2$ occurs when $0 \le x \le 2022 \pi$ for the function $f(x) = 2^x(cos(x) + 1)$.


p3. Stanford is building a new dorm for students, and they are looking to offer $2$ room configurations:
$\bullet$ Configuration $A$: a one-room double, which is a square with side length of $x$,
$\bullet$ Configuration $B$: a two-room double, which is two connected rooms, each of them squares with a side length of $y$.
To make things fair for everyone, Stanford wants a one-room double (rooms of configuration $A$) to be exactly $1$ m$^2$ larger than the total area of a two-room double. Find the number of possible pairs of side lengths $(x, y)$, where $x \in N$, $y \in N$, such that $x - y < 2022$.


p4. The island nation of Ur is comprised of $6$ islands. One day, people decide to create island-states as follows. Each island randomly chooses one of the other five islands and builds a bridge between the two islands (it is possible for two bridges to be built between islands $A$ and $B$ if each island chooses the other). Then, all islands connected by bridges together form an island-state. What is the expected number of island-states Ur is divided into?


p5. Let $a, b,$ and $c$ be the roots of the polynomial $x^3 - 3x^2 - 4x + 5$. Compute $\frac{a^4 + b^4}{a + b}+\frac{b^4 + c^4}{b + c}+\frac{c^4 + a^4}{c + a}$.


p6. Carol writes a program that finds all paths on an 10 by 2 grid from cell (1, 1) to cell (10, 2) subject to the conditions that a path does not visit any cell more than once and at each step the path can go up, down, left, or right from the current cell, excluding moves that would make the path leave the grid. What is the total length of all such paths? (The length of a path is the number of cells it passes through, including the starting and ending cells.)


p7. Consider the sequence of integers an defined by $a_1 = 1$, $a_p = p$ for prime $p$ and $a_{mn} = ma_n + na_m$ for $m, n > 1$. Find the smallest $n$ such that $\frac{a_n^2}{2022}$ is a perfect power of $3$.


p8. Let $\vartriangle ABC$ be a triangle whose $A$-excircle, $B$-excircle, and $C$-excircle have radii $R_A$, $R_B$, and $R_C$, respectively. If $R_AR_BR_C = 384$ and the perimeter of $\vartriangle ABC$ is $32$, what is the area of $\vartriangle ABC$?


p9. Consider the set $S$ of functions $f : \{1, 2, . . . , 16\} \to \{1, 2, . . . , 243\}$ satisfying:
(a) $f(1) = 1$
(b) $f(n^2) = n^2f(n)$,
(c) $n |f(n)$,
(d) $f(lcm(m, n))f(gcd(m, n)) = f(m)f(n)$.
If $|S|$ can be written as $p^{\ell_1}_1 \cdot p^{\ell_2}_2 \cdot ... \cdot  p^{\ell_k}_k$ where $p_i$ are distinct primes, compute $p_1\ell_1+p_2\ell_2+. . .+p_k\ell_k$.


p10. You are given that $\log_{10}2 \approx 0.3010$ and that the first (leftmost) two digits of $2^{1000}$ are 10. Compute the number of integers $n$ with $1000 \le n \le 2000$ such that $2^n$ starts with either the digit $8$ or $9$ (in base $10$).


p11. Let $O$ be the circumcenter of $\vartriangle ABC$. Let $M$ be the midpoint of $BC$, and let $E$ and $F$ be the feet of the altitudes from $B$ and $C$, respectively, onto the opposite sides. $EF$ intersects $BC$ at $P$. The line passing through $O$ and perpendicular to $BC$ intersects the circumcircle of $\vartriangle ABC$ at $L$ (on the major arc $BC$) and $N$, and intersects $BC$ at $M$. Point $Q$ lies on the line $LA$ such that $OQ$ is perpendicular to $AP$. Given that $\angle BAC = 60^o$ and $\angle AMC = 60^o$, compute $OQ/AP$.


p12. Let $T$ be the isosceles triangle with side lengths $5, 5, 6$. Arpit and Katherine simultaneously choose points $A$ and $K$ within this triangle, and compute $d(A, K)$, the squared distance between the two points. Suppose that Arpit chooses a random point $A$ within $T$ . Katherine plays the (possibly randomized) strategy which given Arpit’s strategy minimizes the expected value of $d(A, K)$. Compute this value.


p13. For a regular polygon $S$ with $n$ sides, let $f(S)$ denote the regular polygon with $2n$ sides such that the vertices of $S$ are the midpoints of every other side of $f(S)$. Let $f^{(k)}(S)$ denote the polygon that results after applying f a total of k times. The area of $\lim_{k \to \infty} f^{(k)}(P)$ where $P$ is a pentagon of side length $1$, can be expressed as $\frac{a+b\sqrt{c}}{d}\pi^m$ for some positive integers $a, b, c, d, m$ where $d$ is not divisible by the square of any prime and $d$ does not share any positive divisors with $a$ and $b$. Find $a + b + c + d + m$.


p14. Consider the function $f(m) = \sum_{n=0}^{\infty}\frac{(n - m)^2}{(2n)!}$ . This function can be expressed in the form $f(m) = \frac{a_m}{e} +\frac{b_m}{4}e$ for sequences of integers $\{a_m\}_{m\ge 1}$, $\{b_m\}_{m\ge 1}$. Determine $\lim_{n \to \infty}\frac{2022b_m}{a_m}$.


p15. In $\vartriangle ABC$, let $G$ be the centroid and let the circumcenters of $\vartriangle BCG$, $\vartriangle CAG$, and $\vartriangle ABG$ be $I, J$, and $K$, respectively. The line passing through $I$ and the midpoint of $BC$ intersects $KJ$ at $Y$. If the radius of circle $K$ is $5$, the radius of circle $J$ is $8$, and $AG = 6$, what is the length of $KY$ ?



PS. You should use hide for answers. Collected here.
6 replies
parmenides51
Jun 30, 2022
vanstraelen
an hour ago
Inequalities
sqing   20
N an hour ago by sqing
Let $ a,b>0   $ . Prove that
$$ \frac{a}{a^2+a +2b+1}+ \frac{b}{b^2+2a +b+1}  \leq  \frac{2}{5} $$$$ \frac{a}{a^2+2a +b+1}+ \frac{b}{b^2+a +2b+1}  \leq  \frac{2}{5} $$
20 replies
sqing
May 13, 2025
sqing
an hour ago
No more topics!
Polynomial with roots in geometric progression
red_dog   0
Mar 21, 2025
Let $f\in\mathbb{C}[X], \ f=aX^3+bX^2+cX+d, \ a,b,c,d\in\mathbb{R}^*$ a polynomial whose roots $x_1,x_2,x_3$ are in geometric progression with ration $q\in(0,\infty)$. Find $S_n=x_1^n+x_2^n+x_3^n$.
0 replies
red_dog
Mar 21, 2025
0 replies
Polynomial with roots in geometric progression
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red_dog
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Let $f\in\mathbb{C}[X], \ f=aX^3+bX^2+cX+d, \ a,b,c,d\in\mathbb{R}^*$ a polynomial whose roots $x_1,x_2,x_3$ are in geometric progression with ration $q\in(0,\infty)$. Find $S_n=x_1^n+x_2^n+x_3^n$.
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