Day 1
Problem 1
Solve in integers the equation
Problem 2
Quadrilateral

is inscribed in circle

with

and

. Let

be a variable point on segment

. Line

meets

again at

(other than

). Point

lies on arc

of

such that

is perpendicular to

. Let

denote the midpoint of chord

. As

varies on segment

, show that

moves along a circle.
Problem 3
Let

, where

. Each of the

subsets of

is to be colored red or blue. (The subset itself is assigned
a color and not its individual elements.) For any set

, we then write

for the number of subsets of T that are blue.
Determine the number of colorings that satisfy the following condition: for
any subsets

and

of

,
Day 2
Problem 4
Steve is piling

indistinguishable stones on the squares of an

grid. Each square can have an arbitrarily high pile of
stones. After he finished piling his stones in some manner, he can then perform
stone moves, defined as follows. Consider any four grid squares, which are
corners of a rectangle, i.e. in positions

for some

, such that

and

. A stone move consists of either removing one stone from
each of

and

and moving them to

and

respectively,j or removing one stone from each of

and

and moving them to

and

respectively.
Two ways of piling the stones are equivalent if they can be obtained from one
another by a sequence of stone moves.
How many different non-equivalent ways can Steve pile the stones on the grid?
Problem 5
Let

be distinct positive integers such that

. Show that

is a composite number.
Problem 6
Consider

, and let

be a multiset of positive integers. Let

. Assume that for every

, the set

contains at most

numbers. Show that there are infinitely many

for which the sum of the elements in

is at most

. (A multiset is a set-like collection of elements in which
order is ignored, but repetition of elements is allowed and multiplicity of
elements is significant. For example, multisets

and

are equivalent, but

and

differ.)
Aops
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