A...Question :P (1 Viewer)

airie

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SoulSearcher said:
sure, if you mean by 'dumb old me' as a girl who is going to participate in the AMO, and is probably on her way to killing the HSC maths exams when she does them. :p
lol wow thanks for your confidence in me :p Yep I'm gonna do the AMO very soon...*sees 2001 AMO paper* Ahh shoot *hides* :p
 

Templar

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Try 2004 and 2005. They were the easier years in recent times.
 

m0ofin

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Congratulations and I wish you all the best in the AMO Airie :D Btw, who_loves_maths, your handwriting is so uber-cute :uhhuh:
 

airie

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Templar said:
Try 2004 and 2005. They were the easier years in recent times.
...Really? ... The reason being...? Wow. We're getting dumber. x.x

m0ofin said:
Congratulations and I wish you all the best in the AMO Airie :D
Thanks m0ofin :)
 
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airie said:
dumb old me stared at it for like 5 whole minutes
You're not dumb!

Here's another way to explain the solution to your problem. Since you've spent some time trying to understand my previous solution, I think this time you will find this one easier to understand.

Consider the convex polygon A<sub>0</sub>A<sub>1</sub>A<sub>2</sub>...A<sub>n-1</sub>, with the subscripts reduced (mod n). Let A<sub>i</sub>A<sub>j</sub> be a diagonal. Then by the triangle inequality,

A<sub>i</sub>A<sub>j</sub>+A<sub>i+1</sub>A<sub>j+1</sub> > A<sub>i</sub>A<sub>i+1</sub>+A<sub>j</sub>A<sub>j+1</sub>.

When we sum these inequalities over all n(n-3)/2 diagonals A<sub>i</sub>A<sub>j</sub>, each diagonal occurs twice on the left, and each side n-3 times on the right; so we get
2d > (n-3)p or n-3 < 2d/p.

This is from the first part of the 1984 IMO Question 5.

You can get all the 1959-2005 IMO's on my website www.fourunitmaths.cjb.net :
http://www.angelfire.com/ab7/fourunit/imo-all.pdf (1959-2003)
http://www4.tpgi.com.au/nanahcub/imo2004.pdf (2004)
http://www4.tpgi.com.au/nanahcub/imo2005.pdf (2005)

Hope this helps.

Congratulations on getting into the AMO, and I hope it goes well for you.
 

airie

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buchanan said:
You're not dumb!

Here's another way to explain the solution to your problem. Since you've spent some time trying to understand my previous solution, I think this time you will find this one easier to understand.

Consider the convex polygon A<sub>0</sub>A<sub>1</sub>A<sub>2</sub>...A<sub>n-1</sub>, with the subscripts reduced (mod n). Let A<sub>i</sub>A<sub>j</sub> be a diagonal. Then by the triangle inequality,

A<sub>i</sub>A<sub>j</sub>+A<sub>i+1</sub>A<sub>j+1</sub> > A<sub>i</sub>A<sub>i+1</sub>+A<sub>j</sub>A<sub>j+1</sub>.

When we sum these inequalities over all n(n-3)/2 diagonals A<sub>i</sub>A<sub>j</sub>, each diagonal occurs twice on the left, and each side n-3 times on the right; so we get
2d > (n-3)p or n-3 < 2d/p.

This is from the first part of the 1984 IMO Question 5.

You can get all the 1959-2005 IMO's on my website www.fourunitmaths.cjb.net :
http://www.angelfire.com/ab7/fourunit/imo-all.pdf (1959-2003)
http://www4.tpgi.com.au/nanahcub/imo2004.pdf (2004)
http://www4.tpgi.com.au/nanahcub/imo2005.pdf (2005)

Hope this helps.

Congratulations on getting into the AMO, and I hope it goes well for you.
Thanks for that :) Well the part that I had to think about for quite some time was the 'summing over' part :p See I spent a while trying to picture it in my head, to see how many times each diagonal and side appear on the sides of the inequality :p And thanks for the links :)
 

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