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Problems

1. Tyler has a geometric series with sum 10 and common ratio r. He increases the first term by 4, keeping r the same, giving a new series with sum 15. This allows calculating r = 3/4. 2. Given that the lengths of two sides of a rectangle and one side of an inscribed square are given, the problem asks to compute the product of the possible areas of triangle RKL. 3. Given 17 people at a party each with a reputation of 1-5, the problem asks to compute the largest number of pairs that can be formed if pairs must differ in reputation by at most 1.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
166 views1 page

Problems

1. Tyler has a geometric series with sum 10 and common ratio r. He increases the first term by 4, keeping r the same, giving a new series with sum 15. This allows calculating r = 3/4. 2. Given that the lengths of two sides of a rectangle and one side of an inscribed square are given, the problem asks to compute the product of the possible areas of triangle RKL. 3. Given 17 people at a party each with a reputation of 1-5, the problem asks to compute the largest number of pairs that can be formed if pairs must differ in reputation by at most 1.

Uploaded by

satvik.genius
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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HMMT November 2023

November 11, 2023


Theme Round
1. Tyler has an infinite geometric series with sum 10. He increases the first term of his sequence by 4
and swiftly changes the subsequent terms so that the common ratio remains the same, creating a new
geometric series with sum 15. Compute the common ratio of Tyler’s series.

2. Suppose rectangle F OLK and square LORE are on the plane such that RL = 12 and RK = 11.
Compute the product of all possible areas of triangle RKL.
3. There are 17 people at a party, and each has a reputation that is either 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5. Some of them
split into pairs under the condition that within each pair, the two people’s reputations differ by at
most 1. Compute the largest value of k such that no matter what the reputations of these people are,
they are able to form k pairs.
4. Let LOV ER be a convex pentagon such that LOV E is a rectangle. Given that OV = 20 and LO =
V E = RE = RL = 23, compute the radius of the circle passing through R, O, and V .
n3 −1989
5. Compute the unique positive integer n such that n is a perfect square.
6. A function g is ever more than a function h if, for all real numbers x, we have g(x) ≥ h(x). Consider
all quadratic functions f (x) such that f (1) = 16 and f (x) is ever more than both (x + 3)2 and x2 + 9.
Across all such quadratic functions f , compute the minimum value of f (0).
7. Betty has a 3 × 4 grid of dots. She colors each dot either red or maroon. Compute the number of ways
Betty can color the grid such that there is no rectangle whose sides are parallel to the grid lines and
whose vertices all have the same color.

8. Call a number feared if it contains the digits 13 as a contiguous substring and fearless otherwise. (For
example, 132 is feared, while 123 is fearless.) Compute the smallest positive integer n such that there
exists a positive integer a < 100 such that n and n + 10a are fearless while n + a, n + 2a, . . . , n + 9a
are all feared.
9. Pentagon SP EAK is inscribed in triangle N OW such that S and P lie on segment N O, K and A lie
on segment N W , and E lies on segment OW . Suppose that N S = SP = P O and N K = KA = AW .
Given that EP = EK = 5 and EA = ES = 6, compute OW .
10. It is midnight on April 29th, and Abigail is listening to a song by her favorite artist while staring at
her clock, which has an hour, minute, and second hand. These hands move continuously. Between two
consecutive midnights, compute the number of times the hour, minute, and second hands form two
equal angles and no two hands overlap.

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