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37-th Yugoslav Federal Mathematical Competition 1996: High School

The document contains the problems from the 37th Yugoslav Federal Mathematical Competition held in 1996 for high school students. It includes 4 problems each for the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th grades. The problems cover a range of mathematical topics and concepts such as geometry, number theory, combinatorics, and equations.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
67 views

37-th Yugoslav Federal Mathematical Competition 1996: High School

The document contains the problems from the 37th Yugoslav Federal Mathematical Competition held in 1996 for high school students. It includes 4 problems each for the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th grades. The problems cover a range of mathematical topics and concepts such as geometry, number theory, combinatorics, and equations.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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37-th Yugoslav Federal Mathematical Competition 1996

High School
Bar, April 13, 1996
Time allowed 4 hours.
Each problem is worth 25 points.
1-st Grade

1. A city of the square form has 22 streets which lie on the lines x = n and y =
k, n, k ∈ {0, 1, . . . , 10}. Five businessmen having offices at points A(0, 43/5),
B(17/5, 2), C(16/5, 9), D(17/2, 0), E(46/5, 8) want to make a common meeting
at some of the city crossings. Which crossing should be chosen or the meeting
place if they want the sum of distances to the offices to be minimal? (Note: the
businessmen walk only along streets.)
2. Let P and Q be points on sides BC and CD of a square ABCD such that PQ is
a tangent of the circle with the center A and radius AB. Segments AP and AQ
intersect the diagonal BD at R and S. Prove that points C, P, Q, R and S lie on a
circle.
3. Let ABCD be a square, E be the point on ray AD such that DE = AD and l be the
smaller arc AE of the circle with the center C and radius CA. Let F be the figure
bounded by segments AB, BC, CD, DE and arc l. Divide F by a polygonal line
into two connected congruent parts.
4. Find seven distinct primes p1 , p2 , . . . , p7 less than 1000 satisfying

p2 − p1 = p3 − p2 = · · · = p7 − p6 .

2-nd Grade

1. Prove that there exists a system of 1996 circles in the plane such that any two
circles have at most two points in common and each circle touches exactly five
others.
2. Find the locus of barycenters of all equilateral triangles inscribed in a given
square.
3. Find all solutions in nonnegative integers to the equation
√ √ √ √
x + y + z = 1996.

4. Determine the maximal real number a for which the inequality

x21 + x22 + x23 + x24 + x25 ≥ a(x1 x2 + x2 x3 + x3 x4 + x4 x5 )

holds for any five real numbers x1 , x2 , x3 , x4 , x5 .

The IMO Compendium Group,


D. Djukić, V. Janković, I. Matić, N. Petrović
www.imomath.com
3-rd and 4-th Grades

1. Given nonnegative integers a, b, c, prove that there is no function f : N → N such


that
f (x + y) + f (x) + f (y) = xy + ax + by + c
holds for each x, y ∈ N.
2. Let O be the intersection of diagonals of a convex quadrilateral ABCD and let P
and Q be the circumcenters of triangles ABO and CDO respectively. Prove the
inequality
AB + CD ≤ 4PQ.

3. Given n ∈ N, determine the maximal positive integer k for which there exists a
k-element subset A of {1, 3, . . . , 2n − 1} which does not contain any two numbers
one of which divides the other.
4. Among 1996 almost identical balls two are defective. All regular balls have
equal weights. Weights of the defective balls are equal, but different from the
weight of a regular ball. Prove that one can find out whether defective balls are
lighter or heavier than regular balls by at most three measurements on a scale
without weights.

The IMO Compendium Group,


D. Djukić, V. Janković, I. Matić, N. Petrović
www.imomath.com

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