2013 AMC 12A Problems/Problem 20
Imagine 19 numbers are just 19 persons sitting evenly around a circle ; each of them is facing to the center.
One may check that iff is one of the 9 persons on the left of , and iff is one of the 9 persons on the right of . Therefore, " and and " implies that cuts the circumference of into three arcs, each of which has no more than numbers sitting on it (inclusive).
We count the complement: where the cut generated by has ONE arc that has more than persons sitting on. Note that there can only be one such arc because there are only persons in total.
Suppose the number of persons on the longest arc is . Then two places of are just chosen from the two end-points of the arc, and there are possible places for the third person. Once the three places of is chosen, there are three possible ways to put into them clockwise. Also, note that for any , there are ways to choose an arc of length . Therefore the total number of ways (of the complement) is
So the answer is
NOTE: this multiple choice problem can be done even faster -- after we realized the fact that each choice of the three places of corresponds to possible ways to put them in, and that each arc of length has equitable positions, it is evident that the answer should be divisible by , which can only be from the five choices.