DMO2009
DMO2009
MY
CY
We eat problems
CMY
for breakfast.
Preferably unsolved ones...
Olympiad 2009
de VU de eerste Junior Wiskunde Olympiade gehouden
voor de 100 beste deelnemers aan de Kangoeroewedstrijd.
International
De JWO wordt een jaarlijks terugkerend evenement. Mathematical
Zie ook: www.wiskundeolympiade.nl/junior Olympiad Am
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Contents
1 Introduction
3 First Round, January 2009
9 Final Round, September 2009
14 BxMO Team Selection Test, March 2010
18 Benelux Mathematical Olympiad, April 2010
24 IMO Team Selection Test 1, June 2010
29 IMO Team Selection Test 2, June 2010 Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek
The best students were invited for the final round. In order to stimulate
young students to participate, we set different thresholds for students from
different grades. Those students from grade 5 (4, ≤ 3) that scored 26 (23,
20) points or more on the first round (out of a maximum of 36 points)
were invited to the final round. Also some outstanding participants in the
Kangaroo math contest or the Pythagoras Olympiad were invited.
For the second consecutive year we organised training sessions at six uni-
versities in the country for the 155 students who had been invited for the
final round. Former Dutch IMO-participants were involved in the training
sessions at each of the universities.
Out of those 155, in total 131 participated in the final round on 18 Septem-
ber 2009 at Eindhoven University of Technology. This final round contained
five problems for which the students had to give extensive solutions and
proofs. They had three hours for the paper. After the prizes had been
awarded in the beginning of November, the Dutch Mathematical Olympiad
concluded its 48th edition 2009. In 2011 we will have our 50th edition.
On 5 March 2010 the first selection test was held. The best ten students
participated in the second Benelux Mathematical Olympiad (BxMO), held
in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
In June, out of those 10 students and 3 reserve candidates, the team for
the International Mathematical Olympiad 2010 was selected by two team
selection tests on 9 and 12 June 2010. A seventh, young, promising student
was selected to accompany the team to the IMO. The team had a training
camp in Astana from 28 June until 5 July, together with the team from
1
New Zealand.
We are grateful to Jinbi Jin and Raymond van Bommel for the composition
of this booklet and the translation into English of most of the problems and
the solutions.
2
First Round, January 2009
Problems
A-problems
A1. Ella does three tests. During the first one, she answered 60% of
the 25 questions correctly, during the second one, she answered 70%
of the 30 questions correctly, and during the last one, she answered
80% of the 45 questions correctly. Now if we merge these three tests
together to form one of 100 questions, what is the percentage of these
100 questions that Ella answered correctly?
A) 68% B) 70% C) 72% D) 74% E) 76%
A2. How many of the integers from 10 to 99 (10 and 99 included) have the
property that the sum of its digits is equal to the square of an integer?
(An example: The sum of the digits of 27 is equal to 2 + 7 = 9 = 32 .)
A) 13 B) 14 C) 15 D) 16 E) 17
A3. Ronald throws three dice. These dice look just like ordinary dice, but
their faces are numbered differently. The first die has the numbers 1,
1, 2, 2, 3 and 3 on it. The second die has the numbers 2, 2, 4, 4, 6
and 6 on it. And the third die has the numbers 1, 1, 3, 3, 5 and 5 on
it. He then adds up the three numbers he gets from rolling the three
dice. What is the probability that the resulting number is odd?
1 1 1 2 3
A) 4 B) 3 C) 2 D) 3 E) 4
3
A5. The lengths of the diagonals of a rhombus have a ratio of 3 : 4. (A
rhombus is an equilateral quadrilateral.) The sum of the lengths of
the diagonals is 56. What is the diameter of this rhombus?
A) 80 B) 96 C) 100 D) 108 E) 160
A6. Wouter is traveling by foot from his home to the fitness center. He
also could have chosen to travel by bike, in which case he would travel
7 times as fast. But he left his bike at home. After walking for 1 km,
continuing to walk would take just as long as walking back to get his
bike, and then travel further by bike. By then, what is the distance
in km to the fitness center?
8 7 6 5 4
A) 7 B) 6 C) 5 D) 4 E) 3
A8. Consider all four-digit numbers where each of the digit 3, 4, 6 and 7
occurs exactly once. How many of these numbers are divisible by 44?
A) 2 B) 4 C) 6 D) 8 E) 12
B-problems
The answer to each B-problem is a number.
4
B2. The integer N consists of 2009 consecutive nines.
A computer calculates N 3 = (99999 . . . 99999)3 . 99999
| .{z
. . 99999}
3 2009×
How many nines does the number N contain in
total?
a2 = bc
Solutions
A-problems
A3. B) 13 Note that the second die only has even numbers on it,
and that the third die only has odd numbers on it. So essentially
the question is to find the probability that rolling the first die gives
an even number. Since 2 of the 6 numbers on this die are even, this
probability is equal to 26 = 13 .
5
A4. D) 26 Let’s say we put a, b, and c in the
top three squares. Then the result in the bottom a b c
square is a+2b+c. So we can maximize this result
+ +
by making first b, then a and c as large as possible. b+c
a+b
Taking b = 9, a = 8 and c = 7 then yields 33 as
result. In the same way, we can minimize the result +
a+2b+c
by making first b, then a and c as small as possible.
Taking b = 1, a = 2, c = 3 yields 7 as result. The
difference between these numbers is 33 − 7 = 26.
√
A7. D) 1 + 2 3 In 4ABC, ∠A is half of 60◦ , so
30◦ . Also, ∠C is a right angle, so 4ABC is
a 30◦ -60◦ -90◦ -triangle, where |BC| = 1. So
it’s half of an equilateral triangle with sides
2: |AB| = 2. Now we calculate |AC| √ with the B
|AC| 2 12 =
Theorem
√ of Pythagoras: √ 2 −√
= 2
1
3. So the required length is 3 + 1 + 3.
A 3 C
6
A8. A) 2 Suppose that n, having digits a, b, c and d (so n =
1000a + 100b + 10c + d) is divisible by 44. Then it is also divisible by
11. Since the number m = 1001a + 99b + 11c is also divisible by 11,
so is m − n. Hence m − n = a − b + c − d is a multiple of 11. But this
number is at most the sum of the two highest digits, minus the sum
of the lowest two, so 13 − 7 = 6, and in the same way, we see that this
number is at least −6. So it has to be equal to 0. Thus a + c = b + d,
and since the sum of the digits is 20, we have a + c = b + d = 10.
First suppose that d = 4. Then b = 6 so we get two possibilities for
n, namely 3674 and 7634. But neither of them is divisible by 4, let
alone by 44. Now suppose that d = 6, then we have b = 4, and in this
case we get 3476 and 7436, both of which are divisible by 44. Finally,
note that since n is divisible by 4, d must be even. We deduce that
we have only 2 such numbers that are divisible by 44.
Alternative solution Check all 24 possibilities, or just the 12 even
possibilities, of even only the 6 multiples of 4.
B-problems
7
B2. 4017 93 = 729; 993 = 970299; 9993 = 997002999. It seems to
be the case that in general, the third power of a number n consisting
of k consecutive nines takes the following form: first k − 1 nines; then
a 7; then k − 1 zeroes; then a 2; and finally k nines. To prove this, we
write n = 10k − 1. Indeed: (10k − 1)3 = 103k − 3 · 102k + 3 · 10k − 1 =
102k (10k − 3) + (3 · 10k − 1). The number 10k − 3 can be written as
999 . . . 997 with k − 1 nines. Multiplied with 102k this gives a number
that ends in 2k zeroes. Adding 3 · 10k − 1 to this number, the last
k + 1 zeroes are replaced with 2999 . . . 999 with k nines. So in total,
we have (k − 1) + k nines; in our case, k = 2009, so we have 4017
nines.
√
B3. 2 + 2 2 We only need to look at a
quarter of the tile: 4ABC. The area of
4P QR is half of the area of 4ABC. The B Q
1
triangles are similar,
√ so corresponding sides 2 2
have
√ a ratio of 1 : 2, so |QR| : |BC| = 1 : Q
2. Now we calculate |BQ| using the The-
orem of Pythagoras in 4BQQ0 : 2|BQ| q =
2 x P
A
0 2 2 2 1
|BQ | + |BQ| = 1 , so |BQ| = 2 = R
1
√
2 2. Now √ let us write x for |QR|. Then 1
2
√ √ √ 2
we find x + 2 = 2 · x, so x( √ 2 −√1) = 2 C
√
or equivalently, x = √2−12
= 2(2−1 2+1)
=
√ √ √
2+ 2. Hence
√ |BC|
√ = x+ √ 2 = 2+2
√ 2 (or
|BC| = 2 · x = 2 · (2 + 2) = 2 2 + 2).
B4. (a, b, c) = (−12, 6, 24) of (a, b, c) = (−12, 24, 6) (one answer is enough)
We calculate (b + c)2 in two different ways. (b + c)2 = (18 − a)2 =
324 − 36a + a2 and (b + c)2 = b2 + 2bc + c2 = (756 − a2 ) + 2a2 .
So a2 − 36a + 324 = a2 + 756, or −36a = 756 − 324 = 432, so
a = −12. Substituting this in the first and in the last equation, we
obtain the equations b + c = 30 and bc = 144. Trying some divisors
of 144 = 122 , we then should be able to find a solution. Or we can
just substitute c = 30 − b in the last equation, yielding the quadratic
equation b(30 − b) = 144, or equivalently b2 − 30b + 144 = 0. We can
factorize this as (b − 6)(b − 24) = 0 (or we can use the abc-formula)
to see that we have two solutions b = 6 (and c = 24) or b = 24 (and
c = 6).
8
Final Round, September 2009
Problems
For these problems not only the answer is important; you also have to describe the way you
solved the problem.
9
4. Let ABC be an arbitrary triangle. On the perpendicular bisector of
AB, there is a point P inside of triangle ABC. On the sides BC and
CA, triangles BQC and CRA are placed externally. These triangles
satisfy 4BP A ∼ 4BQC ∼ 4CRA. (So Q and A lie on opposite
sides of BC, and R and B lie on opposite sides of AC.)
Show that the points P , Q, C and R form a parallelogram.
Solutions
1. Note that the two integers mentioned in the second condition cannot
end in a 0; since otherwise the product would also have to end in
a 0. Thus, the two numbers have an equal number of digits. But
a product of two integers of four or more digits consists of at least
seven digits, hence is too large, and a product of two integers of at
most two digits consists of at most four digits, hence is too small.
So to satisfy the second condition, we have to consider products of
integers consisting of three digits, say abc and cba.
If we work this out, we obtain: abc · cba = (100a + 10b + c)(100c +
10b + a) = 10000ac + 1000b(a + c) + 100(a2 + b2 + c2 ) + 10b(a + c) + ac.
If ac > 9, then this integer consists of more than 5 digits. Hence
ac 6 9. Now if b(a + c) > 9, then the first digit will be greater
than ac, hence it will no longer be equal to the last digit. Hence we
also have b(a + c) 6 9. We can use a similar argument to show that
a2 +b2 +c2 6 9. We deduce from this that 1+b2 +1 6 a2 +b2 +c2 6 9,
and hence that b is equal to one of 0,1,2.
10
If b = 1, the conditions become a + c 6 9 and a2 + c2 6 8, and we
must also have 1 6 ac 6 9. From the second condition, we obtain
1 6 a 6 2 and 1 6 c 6 2.
If b = 2, the conditions become a + c 6 4 and a2 + c2 6 5. Hence we
have three possibilities for (a, b).
In the above table, we have worked out all the possibilities. It turns
out that there are eight possible palindromic products: 10201, 12321,
14641, 20502, 23632, 26962, 40804 and 44944.
11
Alternative solution 1: Pick a participant A who has won the least
number of matches, and a participant B who lost to A. Consider
the set X of participants who lost to B. Then the set X does not
contain A. If there is no triple of participants as desired, then A
must have won against all participants in X. But A also won against
B. But then A has won at least one match more than B, yielding a
contradiction.
4. Note that |AP | = |P B|, and hence that |BQ| = |QC| and |CR| =
|RA|. Since 4BP A ∼ 4BQC, it follows that |P B| |QB|
|AB| = |CB| , and hence
|P B| |AB|
that |QB| = |CB| . Moreover, since Q lies outside triangle ABC and
P lies inside of it, we have
12
5. We first consider the effect of two consecutive steps. If before step
2k −1, the stack of cards, from top to bottom, consists of a1 , . . . , a100 ,
the first 2k − 1 cards are reversed in order, so we obtain
a2k−1 , a2k−2 . . . , a2 , a1 , a2k , a2k+1 . . . , a100 . Then, at the 2k th step,
the top 2k cards are reversed in order, yielding
a2k , a1 , a2 , . . . , a2k−2 , a2k−1 , a2k+1 , . . . , a100 . Hence the effect of these
two steps is that the 2k th card is moved up to the top, and the rest
is shifted down. So if we consider the first 100 steps, then first 2 is
put on top, then 4 is put on top of that, then 6, and so on, so we ob-
tain 100, 98, 96, . . . , 4, 2, 1, 3, 5, . . . , 97, 99. We call this a megastep.
In general, a megastep changes the order a1 , a2 , . . . , a99 , a100 into
a100 , a98 , a96 , . . . , a4 , a2 , a1 , a3 , a5 , . . . , a97 , a99 . This megastep is in-
vertible; the order after a megastep can only come from one unique
order. Now we there are only finitely many possible ways (namely
100!) to order the 100 cards, so after applying megasteps for a while,
we’ll obtain an order that has occurred before. Consider the first
megastep that yields an order that has occurred before. If this is not
the starting position, then one megastep before, the position should
have occurred earlier as well; a contradiction. Hence we return to the
starting position after a finite number of (mega)steps.
13
BxMO Team Selection Test, March 2010
Problems
f (x)f (y) = f (x + y) + xy
for all x, y ∈ R.
Is N even or odd?
14
Solutions
2 First, note that the function given by f (x) = 0 for all x ∈ R, does
not satisfy the functional equation. Hence there exists an x0 ∈ R for
which f (x0 ) 6= 0. Substituting x = x0 and y = 0 gives f (x0 )f (0) =
f (x0 ). Since f (x0 ) 6= 0, we obtain f (0) = 1. Now substituting x = 1
and y = −1 gives f (1)f (−1) = f (0) − 1 = 1 − 1 = 0. Hence f (1) = 0
or f (−1) = 0.
We now distinguish the two cases. First, suppose that f (1) = 0, and
substitute x = 1. We then get 0 = f (1)f (y) = f (1 + y) + y for all
y ∈ R, so f (1 + y) = −y for all y ∈ R. Substituting y = t − 1 now
gives f (t) = −t + 1 for all t ∈ R. This is our first candidate solution.
Now suppose that f (−1) = 0 and substitute x = −1. We obtain
0 = f (−1)f (y) = f (−1 + y) − y for all y ∈ R, hence f (−1 + y) = y
for all y ∈ R. Substituting y = t + 1, we obtain f (t) = t + 1 for all
t ∈ R. This is our second candidate solution.
Since we have covered all the cases, these are the only two possible
solutions. Let’s check them.
If f (t) = −t + 1 for all t ∈ R, then for all x, y ∈ R:
15
3 Solution I. Consider an unordered 5-tuple that satisfies the given
equation, and suppose that it consists of the distinct integers b1 , . . . ,
bk , where bi occurs exactly ti times. Hence t1 +· · ·+tk = 5. Note that
5!
this unordered 5-tuple can be ordered in t1 !···t k!
ways. This is odd
if and only if three factors 2 occur in the denominator, which holds
if and only if 4! or 5! occurs in the denominator. Hence the only
unordered 5-tuples that can be ordered in a odd number of ways, are
those that consist of at least 4 numbers that are the same.
Such a 5-tuple has the form (a, a, a, a, b), where b can be equal to a,
and where a, b are positive integers. We obtain the equation a4 + 1b = 1,
or, equivalently, 4b + a = ab. We deduce that b has to be a divisor
of a and that a is a divisor of 4b. Hence there are three possibilities:
a = b, a = 2b and a = 4b. In the first case, we obtain 5b = b2 ,
hence b = 5, yielding the solution (5, 5, 5, 5, 5). In the second case,
we obtain 6b = 2b2 , hence b = 3, yielding the solution (6, 6, 6, 6, 3).
In the third and final case, we obtain 8b = 4b2 , so b = 2, yielding the
solution (8, 8, 8, 8, 2). Hence there are three unordered 5-tuples which
can be ordered in an odd number of ways. Hence N is odd.
Solution II. Let (a1 , a2 , a3 , a4 , a5 ) be an ordered 5-tuple that satisfies
the given equation. Then also the 5-tuple (a2 , a1 , a3 , a4 , a5 ). If a1 6=
a2 , this is a different ordered 5-tuple. Hence there is an even number
of solutions (a1 , a2 , a3 , a4 , a5 ) with a1 6= a2 . So we may only consider
the solutions with a1 = a2 . In the same way, we show that there is
an even number of solutions (a1 , a1 , a3 , a4 , a5 ) with a3 6= a4 . Hence
we may only consider the solutions with a1 = a2 , a3 = a4 . For
each solution (a1 , a1 , a3 , a3 , a5 ) with a1 6= a3 , there is yet another
solution (a3 , a3 , a1 , a1 , a5 ), hence there is an even number of solutions
(a1 , a1 , a3 , a3 , a5 ) with a1 6= a3 . Thus we may only consider the
solution of the form (a, a, a, a, b), where b can be equal to a.
We obtain the equation a4 + 1b = 1, or equivalently, 4b + a = ab. We
can rewrite this last equation as (a − 4)(b − 1) = 4. Since b is a
positive integer, we have b − 1 ≥ 0. Hence b − 1 is a positive divisor
of 4, namely 1, 2 or 4. This yields the three solutions (a, b) = (8, 2),
(a, b) = (6, 3) and (a, b) = (5, 5). Since the number of solutions that
we covered previously, is even, we deduce that N is odd.
16
4 We express all relevant angles in terms of α = ∠BAP and β =
∠P BA. The midpoint of AB is, by definition, also the midpoint of
P M , hence the diagonals of quadrilateral divide each other into equal
segments. Hence AP BM is a parallelogram and we have ∠AM B =
∠AP B. Note that (using the sum of the angles of a triangle) ∠AP B+
α + β = 180◦ . Hence 180◦ − ∠AM B = α + β.
By the inscribed angle theorem, applied on the tangent AB to Γ1 ,
we have α = ∠ADP . Then, by the inscribed angle theorem, applied
on the chord AP of Γ1 , it follows that ∠ADP = ∠AQP . Hence
α = ∠AQP . In a similar way, we deduce that β = ∠P CB = ∠P QB.
Hence ∠AQB = ∠AQP + ∠P QB = α + β = 180◦ − ∠AM B, so
AQBM is a cyclic quadrilateral.
Now let S be the intersection of DP and AB. Using the inscribed an-
gle theorem, we deduce that ∠SP B = ∠P CB = ∠P BS = ∠P BA =
β. Hence ∠DP F = ∠SP B = β, by opposite angles. Now we apply
the exterior angle theorem to 4DF P , to obtain ∠AF B = ∠AF P =
∠F DP + ∠DP F = α + β = ∠AQB. Hence AF QB is a cyclic quadri-
lateral. Hence F lies on the circumcircle of the cyclic quadrilateral
AQBM . Similarly, we see that E also lies on that circle. Hence
AM BEQF is a cyclic hexagon.
17
Benelux Mathematical Olympiad, April 2010
Problems
1. A finite set of integers is called bad if its elements add up to 2010. A fi-
nite set of integers is a Benelux-set if none of its subsets is bad. Deter-
mine the smallest integer n such that the set {502, 503, 504, . . . , 2009}
can be partitioned into n Benelux-sets.
(A partition of a set S into n subsets is a collection of n pairwise
disjoint subsets of S, the union of which equals S.)
p(a+b−2c)+p(b+c−2a)+p(c+a−2b) = 3p(a−b)+3p(b−c)+3p(c−a)
for all a, b, c ∈ R.
18
Solutions
19
2. For a = b = c, we have 3p(0) = 9p(0), hence p(0) = 0. Now set
b = c = 0, then we have
(a+b−2c)+(b+c−2a)+(c+a−2b) = 0 = 3(a−b)+3(b−c)+3(c−a)
for all a, b, c ∈ R.
Now note that if p(x) is a solution to our problem, then so is λp(x)
for all λ ∈ R. Also, if p(x) and q(x) are both solutions, then so is
p(x) + q(x). We conclude that for all real numbers a2 and a1 the
polynomial a2 x2 + a1 x is a solution. Since we have already shown
that there can be no other solutions, these are the only solutions.
20
3. Solution 1.
(a) Since P , R and Q are collinear, we have 4P AQ ∼ 4P BR,
hence
|AQ| |AP |
= .
|BR| |BP |
Conversely, P , T and S are collinear if it holds that
|AS| |AP |
= .
|BT | |BP |
So it suffices to prove
|BT | |AS|
= .
|BR| |AQ|
A1 A : AS = B1 B : BT,
A1 A : AS = B1 R : RB.
21
This gives
BB1 RB1 RB + BB1 BB1 BB1
= = =1+ =1− ,
BT RB RB RB BR
so
1
BB1 = 1 1 .
BT + BR
B2 B : BR = A2 A : AQ = B2 T : T B.
This gives
BB2 T B2 T B + BB2 BB2 BB2
= = =1+ =1− ,
BR TB TB TB BT
so
1
BB2 = 1 1 .
BR + BT
We conclude that B1 = B2 , which implies that P , K and L are
collinear.
22
4. Let (a, b, p, n) be a solution. Note that we can write the given equation
as
(a + b)(a2 − ab + b2 ) = pn .
As a and b are positive integers, we have a + b ≥ 2, so p | a + b.
Furthermore, a2 − ab + b2 = (a − b)2 + ab, so either a = b = 1 or
a2 −ab+b2 ≥ 2. Assume that the latter is the case. Then p is a divisor
of both a+b and a2 −ab+b2 , hence also of (a+b)2 −(a2 −ab+b2 ) = 3ab.
This means that p either is equal to 3 or is a divisor of ab. Since p
is a divisor of a + b, we have p | a ⇔ p | b, hence either p = 3, or
p | a and p | b. If p | a and p | b, then we can write a = pa0 , b = pb0
with a0 and b0 positive integers, and we have (a0 )3 + (b0 )3 = pn−3 , so
(a0 , b0 , p, n − 3) then is another solution (note that (a0 )3 + (b0 )3 is a
positive integer greater than 1, so n − 3 is positive).
Now assume that (a0 , b0 , p0 , n0 ) is a solution such that p - a. From the
reasoning above it follows that either a0 = b0 = 1, or p0 = 3. After
all, if we do not have a0 = b0 = 1 and we have p0 6= 3, then p | a.
Also, given an arbitrary solution (a, b, p, n), we can divide everything
by p repeatedly until there are no factors p left in a.
Suppose a0 = b0 = 1. Then the solution is (1, 1, 2, 1).
Suppose p0 = 3. Assume that 32 | (a20 − a0 b0 + b20 ). As 32 | (a0 + b0 )2 ,
we then have 32 | (a0 + b0 )2 − (a20 − a0 b0 + b20 ) = 3a0 b0 , so 3 | a0 b0 .
But 3 - a0 by assumption, and 3 | a0 + b0 , so 3 - b0 , which contradicts
3 | a0 b0 . We conclude that 32 - (a20 − a0 b0 + b20 ). As both a0 + b0 and
a20 − a0 b0 + b20 must be powers of 3, we have a20 − a0 b0 + b20 = 3. Hence
(a0 − b0 )2 + a0 b0 = 3. We must have (a0 − b0 )2 = 0 or (a0 − b0 )2 = 1.
The former does not give a solution; the latter gives a0 = 2 and b0 = 1
or a0 = 1 and b0 = 2.
So all solutions with p - a are (1, 1, 2, 1), (2, 1, 3, 2) and (1, 2, 3, 2).
From the above it follows that all other solutions are of the form
(pk0 a0 , pk0 b0 , p0 , n0 + 3k), where (a0 , b0 , p0 , n0 ) is one of these three
solutions. Hence we find three families of solutions:
• (2k , 2k , 2, 3k + 1) with k ∈ Z≥0 ,
• (2 · 3k , 3k , 3, 3k + 2) with k ∈ Z≥0 ,
• (3k , 2 · 3k , 3, 3k + 2) with k ∈ Z≥0 .
23
IMO Team Selection Test 1, June 2010
Problems
5 Find all triples (x, y, z) of real (but not necessarily positive) numbers
satisfying
3(x2 + y 2 + z 2 ) = 1,
x2 y 2 + y 2 z 2 + z 2 x2 = xyz(x + y + z)3 .
Solutions
24
hence AP ⊥ BC.
Conversely, suppose that AP ⊥ BC, or equivalently, ∠CEP = 90◦ .
Then we have
√
2 If M ≤ A, then automatically, M < A + B, so we’re done in this
case.
Hence suppose that M > A. Let k be such that ak = M 2 . So
Ak + B = M 2 . Since 0 < M − A < M , the square (M − A)2 is smaller
than M 2 . We have (M − A)2 = M 2 − 2M A + A2 = M 2 − A(2M − A).
So if k − (2M − A) ≥ 0, then
kn + 1 | k(n2 + n + 1) − (n + 1)(kn + 1) = k − n − 1.
25
left hand side is non-negative, and the right hand side is negative,
yielding a contradiction.
Case 3: k = n + 1. Now we have p = (n + 1)n + 1 = n2 + n + 1.
Hence 4p − 3 = 4n2 + 4n + 1 = (2n + 1)2 is a square.
We deduce that in the only possible case, 4p − 3 is a square.
5 We first show that for reals x, y and z satisfying the first condition,
we have
x2 y 2 + y 2 z 2 + z 2 x2 ≥ xyz(x + y + z)3 . (2)
So the solutions that we are looking for, are the cases in which equality
holds in 2.
2 2
Let a, b and c be reals. Then (a−b)2 ≥ 0, so a +b
2 ≥ ab with equality
if and only if a = b. We repeat this for the pairs (b, c) and (c, a), and
after summing, it follows that
a2 + b2 + c2 ≥ ab + bc + ca
26
with equality if and only if a = b = c.
We apply this inequality to the triple (xy, yz, zx), and obtain
x2 y 2 + y 2 z 2 + z 2 x2 ≥ xy 2 z + yz 2 x + zx2 y = xyz(x + y + z)
x2 y 2 + y 2 z 2 + z 2 x2 ≥ xyz(x + y + z) (3)
and
1 ≥ (x + y + z)2 (4)
2 2
To this end, we first multiply (4) by the non-negative factor x y +
y 2 z 2 + z 2 x2 ; we obtain
x = y = z or x2 y 2 + y 2 z 2 + z 2 x2 = 0
and (xy = yz = zx or x + y + z = 0) .
From the second condition, it follows that indeed, equality must hold.
Hence (x, y, z) must satisfy the conditions above. Furthermore, we
27
still have the first condition, which says that 3(x2 + y 2 + z 2 ) = 1:
3(x2 + y 2 + z 2 ) = 1,
x=y=z or x2 y 2 + y 2 z 2 + z 2 x2 = 0,
xy = yz = zx or x + y + z = 0.
3(x2 + y 2 + z 2 ) = 1,
xy = yz = zx,
x=y=z or xyz(x + y + z) = 0.
28
IMO Team Selection Test 2, June 2010
Problems
for all x ∈ R.
(In general the expression a = max g(s) means: a ≥ g(s) for all s ∈ S
s∈S
and furthermore there is an s ∈ S for which a = g(s).)
1
b be positive integers such that M (a, b) = a −
3. (a) Let a and b +
b b + a3 is an integer. Proof that M (a, b) is a square.
(b) Find nonzero integers a and b such that M (a, b) is a positive
integer, but not a square.
29
Solutions
an ≥ 2n−1 − 1 + a1 ≥ 2n−1
We conclude f (x) = x2 .
30
We check if this function satisfies. Let x ∈ R be given. Because
(x − y)2 ≥ 0, it is true that x2 ≥ 2xy − y 2 for all y ∈ R with equality
iff x = y, therefore
x2 = max (2xy − y 2 ).
y∈R
31
that M , N and P are collinear and that QN is parallel to DB. This
yields because of F-angles that ∠P SB = ∠P QN = ∠N P Q, because
|N P | = |N Q|. By Z-angles we see that ∠P M B = ∠M N Q and be-
cause of the exterior angle theorem inside triangle P QN that is equal
to ∠P QN + ∠N P Q = 2∠P SB. So ∠P M B = ∠P SB, together with
the inscribed angle theorem this yields that S lies on Γ1 . So S = D,
from which follows that P , Q and D are collinear.
Because ∠DP B = ∠DM Q = 90◦ and ∠P DB = ∠QDM , it is true
|DP |
that 4DP B ∼ 4DM Q. This yields |DB| = |DM |
|DQ| . Since |DB| =
2|DM |, this is equivalent to |DP ||DQ| = 2|DM |2 .√The power theo-
rem on Γ2 yields |DP ||DQ| = |DR|2 , so |DR| = 2|DM | = |DA|.
5. Let p be a prime and let k be such that A(k) and A(k + 1) are both
divisible by p. The difference between A(k) and A(k + 1) is also
divisible by p and this is equal to
The right hand side is independent of k. We now see that for each
prime p the number −a2 + 4b + 1 has to be divisible by p. This is
only possible if −a2 + 4b + 1 = 0. So we have a2 = 4b + 1. We now
see that a has to be odd and we write a = 2c + 1 with c ∈ Z. Then
it is true that 4b + 1 = a2 = 4c2 + 4c + 1, so b = c2 + c. Therefore,
the polynomial can be written as A(x) = x2 + (2c + 1)x + (c2 + c)
for an integer c. We can factor this as A(x) = (x + c)(x + c + 1),
consequently x = −c and x = −c − 1 are zeroes of the polynomial.
These are both integer points. We conclude that m = −c − 1 satisfies
A(m) = A(m + 1) = 0.
32
Junior Mathematical Olympiad, October 2009
Problems
Part 1
4. Bram has got coins of 5 cent, 10 cent, 20 cent and 50 cent, of each
type at least one. In total he has got 9 coins and together they are
worth 2,10 euro. How many coins of 20 cent does Bram have?
A) 1 B) 2 C) 3 D) 4 E) 5
33
6. Alice, Bas, Chris, Daan and Eva know each other very well. Each
of them always tells the truth or always lies. Chris says: “Alice is
honest”, on which Eve replies: “Chris lies! ” Chris says: “Bas is a
liar.” Eva claims: “Daan is honest.” Which two persons could both
be telling the truth?
A) Alice and Bas B) Bas and Chris C) Chris and Daan
D) Daan and Eva E) Eva and Alice
7. Jan is looking for a triangle which has got circumference 21 and in-
teger side lengths. Moreover, for each pair of sides the length of one
of them has to divide the length of the other. How many different
triangle with these properties exist?
A) 0 B) 1 C) 3 D) 5 E) 6
10. A large bag contains a number of balls: more then 100, but less than
150. If you divide the balls (evenly) over 7 children, then 2 balls will
remain. If you divide the balls over 6 children, 3 balls will remain.
How many balls will remain if you divide the balls over 5 children?
A) 0 B) 1 C) 2 D) 3 E) 4
34
12. Mister Jansen departs every morning at 8:00 to his work place by
car. If he (constantly) drives 40 km/h, he would arrive three minutes
late at his work place. If he drives 60 km/h, he would arrive three
minutes too early. How fast does he need to drive to be exactly on
time?
A) 48 B) 49 C) 50 D) 51 E) 52
14. Sir Tuinder has got a ‘half-open’ fence around his garden made of
shelves. The shelves are alternating at the front and the rear side,
exactly in front of the middle of the gap between the two shelves on
the other side. Here you can see the fence from above. The width of
the shelves is 21 cm and the thickness is 3 cm. Between the front- and
the rear side is a distance of 2 cm. How many cm has the distance
between two shelves next to each other be such that people you can’t
look into the garden from the outside?
A) 7 B) 8 C) 9 D) 10 E) 11
21 ?
3
2
35
Part 2
The answer to each problem is a number.
4. Jaap has got eight integers. Of each integer the first and last dig-
its are 1 and the other digits are 0. The eight integers have got
2, 3, 5, 9, 17, 33, 65 and 129 digits. If Jaap multiplies these eight digits
and adds up the digit of the result, which number will he get?
36
6. A square with area 54 is divided into four equal
squares. The upper left square is colored grey;
the lower right square is again divides into four
equal squares, and so on. The pattern continues
infinitely long. What is the area of the grey region?
7. Start with a number of two digits (the first digit is nonzero) and do
the following: multiply the two digits and add the same two digits
to the product. In this way 27 will yield 14 + 2 + 7 = 23. For how
many two digit numbers the result is equal the the number, you began
with?
9. Anneke can drive from A to B on the high way or via a shorter road.
On the high way Anneke can drive 120 km/h and on the shorter road
she can drive 60 km/h. The high way is 8 km longer, but the trip
takes 8 minutes less. How many kilometers long is the high way from
A to B?
32
10. In the figure you see a square. The square is di-
vided into four rectangles. Of three rectangles the
circumference is given and written inside the rect- 36 42
angle. What is the area of the fourth rectangle?
37
Solutions
Part 1
1
1. C) 8 6. D) Daan and Eva 11. D) hexagon
2. A) 40 7. C) 3 12. A) 48
3. E) 12 8. D) 35 13. A) 9
4. A) 1 9. B) 23 14. C) 9
5. E) 1 34 10. A) 0 15. C) 5
16
Part 2
1. 81 5. 90 8. 8
2. 597 6. 18 9. 32
3. 4 12 7. 9 10. 42
4. 111
| .{z
. . 111}
256 ones
38
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Contents
1 Introduction
3 First Round, January 2009
9 Final Round, September 2009
14 BxMO Team Selection Test, March 2010
18 Benelux Mathematical Olympiad, April 2010
24 IMO Team Selection Test 1, June 2010
29 IMO Team Selection Test 2, June 2010 Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek