- dan's math@home - problem
of the week - archives
-
-
- Problem Archives
page 1
- Problems Only.
For answers & winners click here.
-
- 1-10 . 11-20 . 21-30 . 31-40 . 41-50 . 51-60 . 61-70 . 71-80 . 81-90 . 91-100
- 101-110 . 111-120 . 121-130
. 131-140 . 141-150 . 151-160
. 161-170 . 171-180
- 181-190 . 191-200
. 201-210 . 211-220
. 221-230 . 231+
. prob
index
-
- 1- The Most Divisors
- 2 - Trains versus Fly!
- 3 - Unit fractions 1/n
- 4 - The Census Taker
- 5 - Square root probs
- 6- Buying house nos.
- 7 - Name that pattern!
- 8 - Clink wine glasses
- 9 - Strange Powers !!
- 10- Odd & Abundant?
-
-
- Problem #1 - Posted Friday, November 21, 1997
- The Most Divisors (back to top)
- A divisor of a positive
whole number n is a whole number that divides evenly into n
- (with no remainder).What integer from 1 through 1000 has the most divisors?
- To win you must prove it and explain
your method.
-
-
- Problem #2 - Posted Friday, November 28, 1997
- Trains versus Fly (back
to top)
- Two trains are 2 miles apart
and are traveling towards each other on the same
- track, each train going 30
mph. A fly going 60 mph starts at the nose of one train,
- flies toward the other train,
and upon reaching the second train immediately turns
- around and flies back towards
the first train. The fly buzzes back and forth until all
- three collide. How far did the fly fly?
-
-
- Problem #3 - Posted Sunday, December 7, 1997
- Unit Fraction Problems (back
to top)
- A unit fraction is
of the form 1 / n (where n = whole no. >= 1.)
- a) Starting with 1 / 1 ,
then 1 / 2 , 1 / 3 , etc., how many unit fractions
- does it take to add up to
more than pi ?
- b) Express 3 / 23 as the
sum of two unit fractions; 3 / 23 = 1 / a + 1 / b .
- c) Write 5 / 4 as the sum
of distinct unit fractions.
Fine print . . .
- The winner in part c) will
be the one using the smallest number of fractions.
- In case of a tie, the winner
is the one with the "smallest biggest denominator."
-
-
- Problem #4 - Posted Thursday, December 18, 1997
- The Census Taker Problem
(back to top)
- A census-taker rings Mr.
Simpson's bell and asks how many children he has.
- "Three daughters,"
he replies.
- "And how old are they,
in whole numbers?" asks the census-taker.
- "Well, I'll tell you
this: the product of their ages is 72, and the sum of their ages
is my house number."
- "But that isn't enough
information!" complains the census taker.
- "Okay, my oldest daughter
(in years) likes chocolate milk," replies Mr. Simpson.
- With that, the census-taker
nods and writes down the three ages.
- How old are the Simpson girls,
and how did the census-taker figure it out?
- Include a full explanation!
-
-
- Problem #5 - Posted Monday, December 29, 1997
- A Tree-o of Square Root Problems (back
to top)
- Let Sqrt(x) or -/x
denote the (positive) square root of x,
- as in Sqrt(100) = -/100
= 10.
- Also x ^ 2 will mean
x squared, as in 10 ^ 2 = 10 * 10 = 100.
-
- 1) . . If: Sqrt(m) + Sqrt(n) = 13 , and m
and n differ by 65,
- what is the largest possible
value of m ?
- 2) . . Notice that the equation x^2 - 3 =
0 has a solution x = Sqrt(3).
- Find a polynomial equation
in x, with integer coefficients, having
- x = Sqrt(3) + Sqrt(5) as a solution.
- 3) . . What is a really good fraction approximation
for Sqrt(17),
- and why? Generalize your
answer if possible to Sqrt(n^2 + 1).
-
-
- Problem #6 - Posted Wednesday, January 7, 1998
- New Year, More House Numbers! (back
to top)
- The people living on Sesame
Street all decide to buy new house numbers,
- so they line up at the store
in order of their addresses: 1, 2, 3, . . . .
- If the store has 100 of each
digit, what is the first
address that
- won't be able to buy its
house numbers?
-
-
- Problem #7 - Posted Friday, January 23, 1998
- Patterns and Sequences (back
to top)
- a) 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, _?_
- b) 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, _?_
- c) 3, 3, 5, 4, 4, 3, 5, 5,
4, _?_
- d) 1, 3, 7, 15, 31, _?_
- e) 1, 4, 27, 256, 3125, _?_
- f) 1, 2, 6, 24, 120, 720,
_?_
- g) 1, 2, 6, 30, 210, _?_
-
- What number comes next in
each sequence? Give reasons!
-
-
- Problem #8 - Posted Friday, January 30, 1998
- Clinking Wine Glasses (back
to top)
- When I have wine with a few
people and we clink glasses and say "salud", I can
always
- tell if everyone has "clinked"
with everyone else, because I know math! Let's assume
- each person clinks each other
person exactly once. If there are 2 people, there is one
- "clink." If there
are 3 people, there are 3 clinks.
- 8a. How many clinks are there
for 4, 5, 6, . . . 10 people?
- 8b. How many people were
there if I heard 903 clinks?
- 8c. What is the formula for
the quantity : c(n) = number of clinks for a group of n people
?
-
-
- Problem #9 - Posted Sunday, February 15, 1998
- Strange Powers (back to top)
- The expression b ^ n means
b to the power n.
- 9a) If 3 ^ a = 4 and 4 ^
b = 8, what is 9 ^ (a - b) ?
- 9b) Can you find numbers
a =/= b such that a ^ b = b ^ a ?
- 9c) If a $ b means a ^ b
- b ^ a , what is 4 $ 6 ?
- 9d) Is 2 $ (3 $ 4) the same
as (2 $ 3) $ 4 ?
-
-
-
- Problem #10 - Posted Saturday, February 28, 1998
- Odd and Abundant? (back
to top)
- A natural number is abundant
if its proper divisors (not including itself) add up to more than
- the number.
(12 is abundant because the divisors of 12 are 1,
2, 3, 4, 6, and 12, and 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + 6 = 16 > 12.)
- Note 6 = 1 + 2 + 3 ; 6 is
called perfect; 15 is deficient (not abundant or perfect): 1 + 3 + 5 = 9 < 15.
- What is the smallest odd
abundant number? Prove your answer
and spell out your thinking.
- Hint: Numbers like 12 = 2 * 2 * 3 .
that have lots of small prime factors, tend to be abundant.
-
- THANKS to all of you who
have entered, or even just clicked and looked.
- My website is now in its
fifth season - over 25,000 hits
so far! (Not factorial.)
- Help it grow by telling
your friends, teachers, and family about it.
- YOU CAN ALWAYS FIND ME AT dansmath.com - Dan the Man Bach
- 3*23*29 A.D.
-
- Problem Archive
Index
-
- Probs &
answers . 1-10
. 11-20
. 21-30
. 31-40
. 41-50
. 51-60
. 61-70
. 71-80
. 81-90
. 91-100
- Problems only . .
. 1-10 . 11-20 . 21-30 . 31-40 . 41-50 . 51-60 . 61-70 . 71-80 . 81-90 . 91-100
- Probs &
answers . 101-110
. 111-120
. 121-130
. 131-140
. 141-150
. 151-160
. 161-170
. 171-180
- Problems only . .
. 101-110 . 111-120
. 121-130 .
131-140 . 141-150
. 151-160 . 161-170
. 171-180
- Probs &
answers . 181-190 . 191-200
.
201-210 . 211-220
.
221-230 . 231+
- Problems only . . . . 181-190 . 191-200
. 201-210 . 211-220
. 221-230 . 231+
-
- Browse the complete
problem list, check out the weekly
leader
board,
- or go back and work on
this week's problem!
-
- (back to top)
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