1989 IMO Problems/Problem 1
Problem
Prove that in the set
can be expressed as the disjoint union of subsets
such that
i.) each
contains 17 elements
ii.) the sum of all the elements in each
is the same.
Solution
Let us start pairing numbers in the following fashion, where each pair sums to
:
There are a total of
pairs above. Let us start putting these pairs into each of the
subsets starting with the first pair
going into
,
into
and so on
with
going into
.
Now we have
numbers present in each of the
subsets all of which have the same total sum. We need
more number to be filled in each subset from the remaining
numbers
.
Let us arrange these
numbers in the following manner:
Now notice that for each number that's off by
from
, there's a counter number off by
from
in the opposite direction.
So we need to create similar imbalances in the Subsets
to
, so that we could add the above
numbers to those imbalances to keep the total sum unchanged.
Now start swapping the
number of each pair that we added to subsets
to
to create the above imbalances:
Swap
from
with
from
- this creates an imbalance of
and
Swap
from
with
from
- this creates an imbalance of
and
Swap
from
with
from
- creates an imbalance of
and
Leave
in
as it is -
imbalance.
Similarly,
Swap
from
with
from
- this creates an imbalance of
and
Swap
from
with
from
- this creates an imbalance of
and
Swap
from
with
from
- this creates an imbalance of
and
Now start adding the
numbers from
to the subsets
to
to counter the imbalances
to
so that the sum remains unchanged. Notice that each subset now has
elements with total sum =
.
See Also
| 1989 IMO (Problems) • Resources | ||
| Preceded by First question |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 | Followed by Problem 2 |
| All IMO Problems and Solutions | ||