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AIME 2009 I · 第 10 题

AIME 2009 I — Problem 10

专题
Contest Math
难度
L4
来源
AIME

题目详情

Problem

The Annual Interplanetary Mathematics Examination (AIME) is written by a committee of five Martians, five Venusians, and five Earthlings. At meetings, committee members sit at a round table with chairs numbered from 11 to 1515 in clockwise order. Committee rules state that a Martian must occupy chair 11 and an Earthling must occupy chair 1515, Furthermore, no Earthling can sit immediately to the left of a Martian, no Martian can sit immediately to the left of a Venusian, and no Venusian can sit immediately to the left of an Earthling. The number of possible seating arrangements for the committee is N(5!)3N \cdot (5!)^3. Find NN.

解析

Solution 1

Since the 5 members of each planet committee are distinct we get that the number of arrangement of sittings is in the form N(5!)3N*(5!)^3 because for each M,V,EM, V, E sequence we have 5!5! arrangements within the Ms, Vs, and Es.

Pretend the table only seats 33 "people", with 11 "person" from each planet. Counting clockwise, only the arrangement M, V, E satisfies the given constraints. Therefore, in the actual problem, the members must sit in cycles of M, V, E, but not necessarily with one M, one V, and one E in each cycle(for example, MMVVVE, MVVVEEE, MMMVVVEE all count as cycles). These cycles of MVE must start at seat 11, since an M is at seat 11. We simply count the number of arrangements through casework.

1. The entire arrangement is one cycle- There is only one way to arrange this, MMMMMVVVVVEEEEE

2. Two cycles - There are 3 Ms, Vs and Es left to distribute among the existing MVEMVE. Using stars and bars, we get (41)=4\binom{4}{1}=4 ways for the members of each planet. Therefore, there are 43=644^3=64 ways in total.

3. Three cycles - 2 Ms, Vs, Es left, so (42)=6\binom{4}{2}=6, making there 63=2166^3=216 ways total.

4. Four cycles - 1 M, V, E left, each M can go to any of the four MVE cycles and likewise for V and E, 43=644^3=64 ways total

5. Five cycles - MVEMVEMVEMVEMVE is the only possibility, so there is just 11 way.

Combining all these cases, we get 1+1+64+64+216=3461+1+64+64+216= \boxed{346}

Solution 2

The arrangements must follow the pattern MVEMVE....... where each MVE consists of some Martians followed by some Venusians followed by some Earthlings, for 1,2,3,4,1, 2, 3, 4, or 55 MVE's. If there are kk MVE's, then by stars and bars, there are (4k1){4 \choose k-1} choices for the Martians in each block, and the same goes for the Venusians and the Earthlings. Thus, we have N=13+43+63+43+13=346N = 1^3+4^3+6^3+4^3+1^3 = \boxed{346} - aops5234

Note

You are probably confused by the solutions. I was too when I first read them. Here is the intuition: Consider the the arrangement of the MM's VV's and EE's: MMMMMMMMMM | VVVVVVVVVV | EEEEEEEEEE. Now, we can place a bar in the first Martian's section in 44 spots, and same with the Venusians and Earthlings. Now for instance, MMMMMMM|M|MM || VVVVVV|V|VVV || EEEEEEEE|E|E would represent the table ordering MMVEEE MVE MMVVVE, which is a valid ordering. Hence we proceed with the solution and we are done.

~th1nq3r

Video Solution

https://youtu.be/fNtw1PKE67w?si=6N8_pWHWnURgxkGv

~MathProblemSolvingSkills