Thursday 6 June 2019

SMO 2019 (Open Section) Answers

SMO 2019 Open Rd 2 Namelist

SMO 2019 Open Rd 2 Questions

SMO 2019 Open Questions

SMO 2019 (Open Section) Answers
1. 39
2. 0
3. 49
4. 4041
5. 505
6. 0
7. 0
8. 30
9. 9
10. 750
11. 37
12. 196
13. 4
14. 83210
15. 21
16. 299
17. 24
18. 5
19. 2020
20. 26
21. 1
22. 2
23. 2010
24. 1347
25. 99048

61 comments:

LCR said...

"No, q25 is obviously 4 it's so epic!"

xX_B4nba0-6am1n9-23_Xx said...

Q22 should be 2 - the probability evaluates to 3/8.

Anonymous said...

Opinions on whether this was better or worse than 2018 / past years?

In my opinion, worse.

Much worse.

xX_B4nba0-6am1n9-23_Xx said...

Note that B can be closer to O than A - in this scenario the triangle inequality has a 1/2 chance of holding.

LCR is in a state of said...

Agreement with the above comment

Anonymous said...

I'm dying I did so badly... single digit score

in a state of 6 June said...

bruh

Megamushroom said...

For Q22, isn't the answer 99999? My Y6 senior said so.....

Anonymous 31415 said...

That’s impossible because probability cannot be more than 1

Anonymous said...

What do you think will be the cut off?

Anonymous said...

hi can i ask what's the fraction for q16

xX_B4nba0-6am1n9-23_Xx said...

It's 48/251.

Hmm said...

I find the answers for questions 2, 6 and 7 very interesting.

why no marks said...

Hmm

Unknown said...

Guys, I think I got 5, so does this mean I get honourable mention?

Anonymous said...

I got 6 last year and got HM

Anonymous said...

Can 11 get me anything?

Anonymous said...

Q9 should be 7, because a = 8, b = 1, and the problem asks form b-a, not b+a

Unknown said...

Anyone has a guess for the score to enter the second round ?

bthan bing said...

b = 8, and a = -1, since a ≤ x ≤ b.
Hence the answer is b - a = 9.

Anonymous said...

anyone knows the construction for q13, i only have 6,15,21 and 21,14,35 which give an answer of 3

Anonymous said...

can some explain why 21:1?

if n=1, (e^1/1)/1 is already 2 so how can summation limit be 1

Intellectual said...

Imo the phrasing is quite ambiguous

Anonymous said...

The answer should be 4 but it wont be that easy?

JR said...

q22 should be 4. Imagine a graph of cubic square of 0≤x≤1,0≤y≤1,the equation holds when 1. x<1/2andy>1/2andy-x<1/2, 2. x>1/2andy<1/2and x-y<1/2.
The area satisfied is 1/4

Anonymous said...

Isnt 48/251 bigger than 386/2019?

Anonymous said...

Oh nvm i read the qn wrongly

Anonymous said...

Was this harder than last year or easier? What about cut-offs?

LCR is in a state of said...

Indignation as he asked his very trustworthy invigilator which told him it was only 1 letter and not 1 of each letter

Anonymous said...

Hello, what are the points for HM, bronze, silver, gold and round 2? Thanks

Anonymous said...

My guess:
HM 5-6
Bronze 7-8
Silver 9+
Round 2 11-12

Anonymous said...

for q13, one construction is 1, 23, 56, 78.
Basically the consecutive differences can be 2p, 3p, 2p, where p is some prime larger than 7.

Anonymous said...

This year, the questions are all atypical. Very strange..

Anonymous said...

It decreases when n increases. You can imagine it as a series of n rectangles, each with width 1/n on the graph of y=e^x from 0 to 1. The sum of the areas of the rectangles (an overestimation) is the expression you want to find, and it approaches the area under the graph when n goes to infinity. So its just the definite integral of e^x from 0 to 1, giving e-1.

Anonymous said...

Based on past experiences, do you guys think 9 will get anything?

Anonymous said...

Q22, answer seems to be 4

Restia said...

Shouldn't 23 be 2020?

Anonymous said...

Ever seen the 2009-2011 papers?

Unknown said...

Hi, can I ask how did you solve Q25? I've been trying to solve it but haven't had any success :( would appreciate any help! Thanks!

Anonymous said...

question 2 should be c, last year's smo papers second question was the same as this one

Anonymous said...

What will 9 get me? Bronze or honourable mention?

Anonymous said...

Bronze

Anonymous said...

round 2 list is out https://sms.math.nus.edu.sg/Competitions/SMO2019/R2Open-2019.pdf

Anonymous said...

You guys mind sharing how much yall got?

Anonymous said...

What’s the cut off this year?

Anonymous said...

When will we know whether we got any award?

Anonymous said...

I got 13 and got it, can’t believe it myself haha

Anonymous said...

Anyone got in with 11

Anonymous said...

I got 11, didn't make it sadly. I wonder if 12 makes the cutoff.

Anonymous said...

12 is the cut off. My friend got 12 and got in

Anonymous said...

does anyone know when we'll know our results??

Anonymous said...

Question 25 hint: for most colourings of the top two rows, the top two rows will completely determine the colouring of the rest of the rows.

See also SMO Senior 2014, question 27

Praveen said...

Hi guys, anyone know how to do question 12? I have been trying but unfortunately I couldn't get the answer. I tried using quadratic mean ≥ arithmetic mean, as well as power mean and Cauchy Schwarz inequality but it doesn't help me solve the question in any way nor does it help me move forward. The only lead I have is that the square of a number is positive, so 960498 is the sum of 99 positive square numbers, but idk how to move forward from here. Also is x1,x2,..,x99 supposed to be integers or reals? Because it doesn't mention anywhere in the question.

Anonymous said...

@Praveen there's no need for inequalities. A level statistics knowledge is sufficient. Also, they're reals.

Praveen said...

How do you use A Level Statistics? I mean like the first thing I get is that the mean of 99 numbers is 98. What do I do now for the sum of the squares?

Anonymous said...

@Praveen Using the sum of squares, you can deduce that the variance is also 98. For all the numbers to have the mean 98 and variance 98 with x1 being as large as possible, the other numbers x2, x3, ..., x99 must contribute as little to the variance as possible, i.e. they have to be equal. You can use the mean of 98 to figure out what x2, x3, ... are equal to in terms of x1, then use the sum of squares to figure out what x1 itself is.

Btw, if you don't want to use statistics, Cauchy-Schwarz works too. See http://www.artofproblemsolving.com/Forum/viewtopic.php?f=150&t=481764

Anonymous said...

One can easily use Cauchy Schwarz Inequality to get 196

Anonymous said...

Can upload round 2 question asap thanks

Anonymous said...

Will 7 in round 1 of open get me a bronze.

Anonymous said...

You can check results are out to schools

Anonymous said...

Where are SMO 2020 Open Answers