Difference between revisions of "1975 USAMO Problems"
(New page: Problems from the ''' USAMO'''. ==Problem 1== (a) Prove that <center><math>[5x]+[5y]\ge [3x+y]+[3y+x]</math>,</center> where <math>x,y...) |
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− | Problems from the ''' [[United States of America Mathematical Olympiad | USAMO]]'''. | + | Problems from the '''1975 [[United States of America Mathematical Olympiad | USAMO]]'''. |
==Problem 1== | ==Problem 1== | ||
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==Problem 2== | ==Problem 2== | ||
− | Let <math>A,B,C,D</math> denote four points in space and <math>AB</math> the distance between <math>A</math> and <math>B</math>, and so on. Show that < | + | Let <math>A,B,C,D</math> denote four points in space and <math>AB</math> the distance between <math>A</math> and <math>B</math>, and so on. Show that |
+ | <cmath>AC^2+BD^2+AD^2+BC^2\ge AB^2+CD^2.</cmath> | ||
[[1975 USAMO Problems/Problem 2 | Solution]] | [[1975 USAMO Problems/Problem 2 | Solution]] | ||
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[[1975 USAMO Problems/Problem 5 | Solution]] | [[1975 USAMO Problems/Problem 5 | Solution]] | ||
− | = See | + | == See Also == |
− | |||
− | |||
{{USAMO box|year=1975|before=[[1974 USAMO]]|after=[[1976 USAMO]]}} | {{USAMO box|year=1975|before=[[1974 USAMO]]|after=[[1976 USAMO]]}} | ||
+ | {{MAA Notice}} |
Latest revision as of 18:57, 3 July 2013
Problems from the 1975 USAMO.
Problem 1
(a) Prove that
![$[5x]+[5y]\ge [3x+y]+[3y+x]$](http://latex.artofproblemsolving.com/f/3/5/f35b4df2174c9e93d13d91ef893d3c1743e22e01.png)
where and
denotes the greatest integer
(e.g.,
).
(b) Using (a) or otherwise, prove that

is integral for all positive integral and
.
Problem 2
Let denote four points in space and
the distance between
and
, and so on. Show that
Problem 3
If denotes a polynomial of degree
such that
for
, determine
.
Problem 4
Two given circles intersect in two points and
. Show how to construct a segment
passing through
and terminating on the two circles such that
is a maximum.
Problem 5
A deck of playing cards, which contains three aces, is shuffled at random (it is assumed that all possible card distributions are equally likely). The cards are then turned up one by one from the top until the second ace appears. Prove that the expected (average) number of cards to be turned up is
.
See Also
1975 USAMO (Problems • Resources) | ||
Preceded by 1974 USAMO |
Followed by 1976 USAMO | |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 | ||
All USAMO Problems and Solutions |
The problems on this page are copyrighted by the Mathematical Association of America's American Mathematics Competitions.