2018 AIME I Problems/Problem 9: Difference between revisions
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This problem is tricky because it is the capital of a few "bashy" calculations. Nevertheless, the process is straightforward. Call the set <math>\{a, b, c, d\}</math>. | This problem is tricky because it is the capital of a few "bashy" calculations. Nevertheless, the process is straightforward. Call the set <math>\{a, b, c, d\}</math>. | ||
Note that there are only two cases: 1 where <math>a + b = 16</math> and <math>c + d = 24</math> or 2 where <math>a + b = 16</math> and <math>a + c = 24</math>. Also note that there is no overlap between the two situations! This is because if they overlapped, adding the two equations of both cases and canceling out gives you <math>a=d</math>, which | Note that there are only two cases: 1 where <math>a + b = 16</math> and <math>c + d = 24</math> or 2 where <math>a + b = 16</math> and <math>a + c = 24</math>. Also note that there is no overlap between the two situations! This is because if they overlapped, adding the two equations of both cases and canceling out gives you <math>a=d</math>, which cannot be true. | ||
Case 1. | Case 1. | ||
Revision as of 22:04, 8 March 2018
Find the number of four-element subsets of
with the property that two distinct elements of a subset have a sum of
, and two distinct elements of a subset have a sum of
. For example,
and
are two such subsets.
Solutions
Solution 1
This problem is tricky because it is the capital of a few "bashy" calculations. Nevertheless, the process is straightforward. Call the set
.
Note that there are only two cases: 1 where
and
or 2 where
and
. Also note that there is no overlap between the two situations! This is because if they overlapped, adding the two equations of both cases and canceling out gives you
, which cannot be true.
Case 1.
This is probably the simplest: just make a list of possible combinations for
and
. We get
for the first and
for the second. That appears to give us
solutions, right? NO. Because elements can't repeat, take out the supposed sets
![]()
That's ten cases gone. So
for Case 1.
Case 2.
We can look for solutions by listing possible
values and filling in the blanks. Start with
, as that is the minimum. We find
, and likewise up to
. But we can't have
or
because
or
, respectively! Now, it would seem like there are
values for
and
unique values for each
, giving a total of
, but that is once again not true because there are some repeated values! We can subtract 1 from all pairs of sets that have two elements in common, because those can give us identical sets. There are 3 pairs about
and 3 pairs about
, meaning we lose
. That's
for Case 2.
Total gives
.
-expiLnCalc
See Also
| 2018 AIME I (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
| Preceded by Problem 8 |
Followed by Problem 10 | |
| 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 | ||
| All AIME Problems and Solutions | ||
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