答案解析请参考文末
One commercially available ten-button lock may be opened by depressing -- in any order -- the correct five buttons. The sample shown below has??as its combination. Suppose that these locks are redesigned so that sets of as many as nine buttons or as few as one button could serve as combinations. How many additional combinations would this allow?
For any positive integer?, let?
?denote the square of the sum of the digits of?
. For?
, let?
. Find?
.
Find??if?
.
Suppose that??for?
. Suppose further that
Let?, in lowest terms, be the probability that a randomly chosen positive divisor of?
?is an integer multiple of?
. Find?
.
It is possible to place positive integers into the vacant twenty-one squares of the 5 times 5 square shown below so that the numbers in each row and column form arithmetic sequences. Find the number that must occupy the vacant square marked by the asterisk (*).
In triangle?,?
, and the altitude from?
?divides?
?into segments of length?
?and?
. What is the area of triangle?
?
The function?, defined on the set of ordered pairs of positive integers, satisfies the following properties:
Calculate?
.
Find the smallest positive integer whose?cube?ends in?.
A convex polyhedron has for its faces 12 squares, 8 regular hexagons, and 6 regular octagons. At each vertex of the polyhedron one square, one hexagon, and one octagon meet. How many segments joining vertices of the polyhedron lie in the interior of the polyhedron rather than along an edge or a face?
Let??be complex numbers. A line?
?in the complex plane is called a mean line for the points?
?if?
?contains points (complex numbers)?
?such that
Let??be an interior point of triangle?
?and extend lines from the vertices through?
?to the opposite sides. Let?
,?
,?
, and?
?denote the lengths of the segments indicated in the figure. Find the product?
?if?
?and?
.
Find??if?
?and?
?are integers such that?
?is a factor of?
.
Let??be the graph of?
, and denote by?
?the reflection of?
?in the line?
. Let the equation of?
?be written in the form
Find the product?
.
In an office at various times during the day, the boss gives the secretary a letter to type, each time putting the letter on top of the pile in the secretary's in-box. When there is time, the secretary takes the top letter off the pile and types it. There are nine letters to be typed during the day, and the boss delivers them in the order 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9.
While leaving for lunch, the secretary tells a colleague that letter 8 has already been typed, but says nothing else about the morning's typing. The colleague wonders which of the nine letters remain to be typed after lunch and in what order they will be typed. Based upon the above information, how many such after-lunch typing orders are possible? (That there are no letters left to be typed is one of the possibilities.)
Note that this revolves between the two numbers. Since??is even, we thus have?
.
gives?,?
. Now it is simple to calculate?
. One way to do it is to see that?
?has?
?and?
?has?
, so?
?has?
. Now,?
?has?
, so?
.
First, let??the number to be placed in the first column, fourth row. Let?
?the number to be placed in the second column, fifth row. We can determine the entire first column and fifth row in terms of?
?and?
:
Next, let??the number to be placed in the second column, fourth row. We can determine the entire second column and fourth row in terms of?
,?
, and?
:
We have now determined at least two values in each row and column. We can finish the table without introducing any more variables:
We now have a system of equations.
Solving, we find that?. The number in the square marked by the asterisk is?
Using the identities??and?
, we have:
?
?
?
.
Hence,??is a solution to the functional equation.
Since this is an?AIME?problem, there is exactly one correct answer, and thus, exactly one possible value of?.
Therefore,?.
?and?
.?
?due to the last digit of?
. Let?
. By expanding,?
.
By looking at the last digit again, we see?, so we let?
?where?
. Plugging this in to?
?gives?
. Obviously,?
, so we let?
?where?
?can be any non-negative integer.
Therefore,?.?
?must also be a multiple of?
, so?
. Therefore, the minimum of?
?is?
.
Let?. We factor an?
?out of the right hand side, and we note that?
?must be of the form?
, where?
?is a positive integer. Then, this becomes?
. Taking mod?
,?
, and?
, we get?
,?
, and?
.
We can work our way up, and find that?,?
, and finally?
. This gives us our smallest value,?
, so?
, as desired. - Spacesam
We know that all vertices look the same (from the problem statement), so we should find the number of line segments originating from a vertex, and multiply that by the number of vertices, and divide by 2 (because each space diagonal is counted twice because it has two endpoints).
Counting the vertices that are on the same face as an arbitrary vertex, we find that there are 13 vertices that aren't possible endpoints of a line originating from the vertex in the middle of the diagram. You can draw a diagram to count this better:??Since 13 aren't possible endpoints, that means that there are 35 possible endpoints per vertex. The total number of segments joining vertices that aren't on the same face is?
Since??had already been added to the pile, the numbers?
?had already been added at some time to the pile;?
?might or might not have been added yet. So currently?
?is a subset of?
, possibly with?
?at the end. Given that?
?has?
?elements, there are?
?intervals for?
?to be inserted, or?
?might have already been placed, giving?
?different possibilities.
Thus, the answer is??
?
.
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