Six points are chosen on the sides of an equilateral triangle : , on , , on and , on , such that they are the vertices of a convex hexagon with equal side lengths.
Prove that the lines , and are concurrent.
| Year | Filename | Language | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2005 | IMO-2005-problems-eng.pdf | en | — |
Six points are chosen on the sides of an equilateral triangle : , on , , on and , on , such that they are the vertices of a convex hexagon with equal side lengths.
Prove that the lines , and are concurrent.
Let be a sequence of integers with infinitely many positive and negative terms. Suppose that for every positive integer the numbers leave different remainders upon division by .
Prove that every integer occurs exactly once in the sequence .
Let be three positive reals such that . Prove that
Determine all positive integers relatively prime to all the terms of the infinite sequence
Let be a fixed convex quadrilateral with and not parallel with . Let two variable points and lie of the sides and , respectively and satisfy . The lines and meet at , the lines and meet at , the lines and meet at .
Prove that the circumcircles of the triangles , as and vary, have a common point other than .
In a mathematical competition, in which 6 problems were posed to the participants, every two of these problems were solved by more than of the contestants. Moreover, no contestant solved all the 6 problems. Show that there are at least 2 contestants who solved exactly 5 problems each.