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Junior Division Questions 1 to 10, 3 marks each 2015 + 201.5 equals (A) 2036.5 (B) 2116.5 (C) 2225.5 (D) 2216.5 (6) 2115.5 ‘The value of x in the diagram is (A) 100° (B) 130° (C) 110° x (D) 120° (B) 90° 30 740" The trip to school takes 23 minutes. I need to be at school at 9:05am. The latest I can leave home is (A) 8:46am (B) 8:37am (©) 8:52am (D) 8:42am (E) 8:48am What is the value of 100 twenty-cent coins? (A) $20 (B) S10 (C) $200 (D) 82 (E) $100 What is the area of this triangle in square ~~ centimetres? 2Qem ~~ (ji Bw Cu W)7 we a 12cm When the bell rang, there were 3 teachers and 6 students in the classroom. Several students arrived after the bell. Once everyone had arrived, there were 4 students for every teacher. How many students arrived after the bell? (A) 18 (B) 12 (C)6 (D) 3 (E)9 ‘A movie lasts for 24 hours. The movie is shown in two equal sessions. For how many minutes does each session last? (A) 85 (B) 70 (c) 80 (D) 65 (E) 75 J2 Four unit squares are laid out in five different arrangements as shown below, Which one has the largest perimeter? al of of of e l= | a Ari, Bryce, Cy and Erie are members of our school’s basketball team. Ari is 186cm tall. He is Lem taller than Bryce who in turn is 6 cm shorter than Cy. Eric is Lem taller than Cy. Eric’s height is (A) 183en (B) 205em (C) 178cm (D) 189¢m (B) 177em 10. Ana, Ben, Con, Dan and Eve are sitting around a ta- ble in that order. Ana calls out the number 1, then Ben calls out the umber 2, then Con calls out the number 3, and so on. After a person calls out a num- ber, the next person around the table calls out the next number. Anyone who calls out a multiple of 7 must immediately leave the table, Who is the last person remaining at the table? (A) Ana, (B) Ben (G) Con (D) Dan (E) Eve 1. Questions 11 to 20, 4 marks each 5 7p OF 38 is equal to (A) 76 (B) 19 ©? (0) 24 (6) 10 IB 12. The diagram shows a circle and a square with the same So centre, / What fraction of the circle is shaded? ( 5 4 3 6 2 (As (B) > Os Oa ©)5 13. In the addition below «, y and 2 represent three different digits. 42 a zy 2 What is the value of x+y +2? (Ayo (B) 8 (C) 10 (D)7 ()6 14. A cube has the letters A, C, M, T, H and § on its six faces. Here are two views of this cube. > ze kw Which one of the following could be a third view of the same cube? (A) es (B) ©) \G (©) Wa ®) So 15. Five students are to be photographed in a row with the tallest in the centre and the shortest two at the ends. If no two students are the same height, how many different arrangements are possible? (A) 6 (B)2 (C) 10 (D)5 (B)4 16. ja ‘Three boys and three girls all celebrate their birthday today, but they are cach different ages. The youngest is 1 year old. ‘The sum of the ages of the three girls is the same as the sum of the ages of the three boys. What is the smallest possible total of all six ages? (A) 22 (B) 24 (C) 28 (D) 21 (E) 26 17. Jenna measures three sides of a rectangle and gets a total of 80em. Dylan measures three sides of the same rectangle and gets a total of 88cm. What is the perimeter of the rectangle? (A) 120m (B) 132em (C) 96cm (D) 168em (E) 156em 18. Jim is running five laps of the school oval. When he is 3 of the way round his fourth lap, what fraction of his run has he E completed? 2 1 1 3 (2 (3 @4 4 9) 5 4 ©? 19. How many two-digit numbers have the property that the sum of the digits is a perfect square? (A) 15 (B) 18 (©) 13 (Dp) 19 (17 20. On this cube, opposite faces add to the same sum and all faces are prime numbers. (Note that 1 is not prime.) What is the smallest possible total of the faces which cannot be ae (A) 4 (B) 35 (c) 45 (D) 47 (E) 37 Questions 21 to 25, 5 marks each 21. A recipe requires 2kg sugar, 4kg butter, and 6 kg flour to make 8 cakes. How many cakes can you make if you have 9kg sugar, 17kg butter and 28kg flour? (A) 40 (B) 34 (©) 37 (D) 32 (E) 36 22, Two ordinary dice are rolled. The two resulting numbers are multiplied together to create a score. The probability of rolling a score that is a multiple of six is i} Bs ©} )} ©) 23. Jill and Jack are exercising at a beach. They both start from the car park at one end of the beach. Jill runs at a constant speed and Jack walks at a constant speed, When Jill turns at the end of the beach to run back, she notices that Jack is then halfway along the beach. How far along the beach will Jack be when Jill next passes him? (A) Two-thirds of the way (B) Five-sixths of the way (C) Three-quarters of the way (D) Five-eighths of the way (E) Seven-eighths of the way 24. The country of Numismatica has six coins of the following denominations: 1 cent, 2 cents, 4 cents, 10 cents, 20 cents and 40 cents. Using the coins in my pocket, I can pay exactly for any amount up to and including 200 cents. What is the smallest number of coins I could have? (A120 Bl (uM (D9 (BS 25. In the diagram, PT = TS ZPQR = 90° and ZQPR = Then x is equal to (A) 20 (B) 25 (@) 275 (D) 22.5 (B) 30 JG For questions 26 to 30, shade the answer as an integer from 0 to 999 in the space provided on the answer sheet. Question 26 is 6 marks, question 27 is 7 marks, question 28 is 8 marks, question 29 is 9 marks and question 30 is 10 marks. 26. I write down three different positive whole numbers that add to 96. The sum of any two is divisible by the third. What is the largest of these three numbers? 27. At a football match, one-third of spectators support the Reds and the rest support the Blues. At half-time 345 Blues supporters leave because their team is losing, and the remaining Blues supporters now make up one-third of the total, How many Reds supporters are ther 28. A 3 x 2 flag is divided into six squares, as shown, Each square is to be coloured green or blue, so that every square shares at least one edge with another square of the same colour In how many different ways can this be done? 29. Zoltan has a list of whole numbers, all larger than 0 but smaller than 1000. He notices that every number in his list is either one-third of another number in the list or three times another number in the list. What is the largest number of different whole numbers that can be on Zoltan’s lis 30. In a stack of logs, each row has exactly one fewer log than the row below. With 9 logs, the tallest possible stack is shown, With 2015 logs, how many rows are there in the tallest possible stack? 2015 AMC Junior N Junior 1 ) 2 © 3 (D) 4 (A) 5 B) 6 © 7 B) 8 (E) 9 (D) 10 (D) I (B) 12 (A) 13 © 4 (A) 15 (E) 16 (A) 17 (A) 18 © 19 ) 20 €) 21 (B) 22 B) 23 (A) 24 ®B) 25 (D) 26 048 27 230 28 022 29 555 30 062 Solutions — Junior Division 1. 2015 + 201.5 = 2216.5, hence (D). 2. The three angles add to 180°, so 2° = 110°, henee (C) 3. Since 23 minutes before 9:05 am is 18 minutes before 9 am, the latest I can leave home is 8:42am, hence (D) 4, Alternative 1 100 times 1c is $1, so 100 times 20¢ is $20, hence (A). Alternative 2 ‘There are 5 twenty-cent coins for every dollar, and 10\ hence (A). 5. (Also 11) The area is $ x 12x 2= 12em?, hence (B). G. Since there were 3 teachers, there would be 12 students in all. Six of these were there on time, so 6 arrived after the bell, hence (C). 7. (Also 12) The movie lasts for 120 +20 = 140 minntes, so each half is 140 + 2 0 minutes, hence (B). 8. Counting unit lengths, (A) has perimeter 10, (B) has perimeter 10, and (D) has perimeter 8. The perimeter of (C) is 8 +4 x 4 = 10 and the perimeter of (E) is w+2xt=u1 hence (E). 9. Bryce is 186 — 14 = 172cm tall. Cy is 172+ 6 = 178cm tall. Eric is 178 + 11 = 189cm tall, hence (D). 2015 AMC - Junior Solutions. http://anzexams.com 10. 1. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. hitp:/anzexams.com (Also 16) The table below shows that Ben leaves after calling out the number 7, Bve leaves after calling out the number 14, Ana leaves after calling out the number 21, and Con leaves after calling out the number 28. ‘Therefore, Dan is the last person remaining at the table. yay A BC DEAB hence (D) =) at ‘ 19 = 2, so that 75 of 38 is 10, hence (B) 7 Drawing lines from the centre through the corners and parallel 2 to the sides divides the circle into 8 equal sectors. Five of these are shaded, which is 3 of the circle, hence (A) In the hundreds column, 2 must be 1. Then the units column must have 7 +4 = 11 so ¢=7. Finally 47 +74 = 121 and so y=2. Then r+y+2=7+2+1=10, hence (C) (Also UP20, I Faces C and T must be opposite, ruling out (B) and (©). With A upright, the face to the right is M, ruling ont (D). With C upright, the face above is A, ruling out (E) (A) is possible with H opposite face A, hence (A). Call the tallest A and the shortest D and 2, and the others B and G. The only possible arrangements are DBACE, DCABE, EBACD, ECABD, hence (E). The smallest total of 6 different positive integ is 1+2+3+4+5+1 21. However, half of the total is boys’ ages and half is girls’ ages, so 21 is not possible, A total of 22 = 1+2+3+4+5+7 is possible with boys’ ages 1+3+7= 11 and girls’ ages 2+4+5=11, hence (A). (Also 111, $6) Alternative 1 Jenna must leave ont a longer side and Dylan a shorter side, where the longer side is Sem longer than the shorter side. So the sides are xem and («+ 8)em. Then Jenna’s measurement is 2r + +8 = 80, so that 3 = 72 and «= 24. The rectangle is 24cm by 32cm. The perimeter is then 2 x 2442 x 32 = 112cm, hence (A). 2015 AMC - Junior Solutions Alternative 2 Suppose the rectangle has width w and height h. Dylan’s and Jenna’s measurements are 2w +h and 2h-+w. Adding these, 3u + 3h = 80 + 88 = 168 and so w-+h 168 +3 = 56. Then the perimeter is 2(w +h) = 18. Jim has completed 34 12cm, hence (A) 3 of his run, hence (C) 2 haps, which is 19. The sum of the two digits is at least 1 and at most 18. As a perfect square, the sum is one of 1, 4, 9 or 16. We consider the two digit numbers with each of these digit sums: Sum | Numbers Count: 1 |10 1 4 | 13, 22, 31, 40 4 9 | 18, 27, 36, 45, 54, 63, 72, 81,90] 9 16_| 79, 88, 97 3 7 20. Suppose the hidden prime numbers are X, Y and Z as shown below. Then 17+ X 13+Y =54Z. The smallest total X+¥ +Z s small as possible. The table sho values, (xh hence (E) ill occur when the prime X is s possible values for X, eliminating composite xX |2 35 7 19 20 22 24 Then the smallest possible sum of hidden faces is 7+ 11 +19 = 37, 21. Alternative 1 For a given quantity of sugar hence (E) the recipe requires twice as much butter and three times as much flour. So to use 9 kg sugar, you would need 2 x 9 = 18 kg butter and 3x 9 = 27 kg flour. Although there is enough flour to do this, there is not enough butter — so the quantity of butter is the limiting factor. Given that the recipe requires 4 kg butter to make 2 2x 17 = 34 cakes, Alternative 2 x4 = 8 cakes, you can use 17 kg butter to make hence (B). Each cake requires tke sugar, 3 kg butter and 3 kg flour. ‘Then there is enough sugar for 9 x 4 17 x 2 = 34 cakes. These 34 cakes require 34 x 3 2015 AMC - Junior Solutions = 36 cakes, but there is only enough butter for = 254 kg flour, which is available, hence (B). http:anzexams.com 22. (Also 114, $7) ‘The score is a multiple of 6 if one of the dice is 6 or if one of the dice is even (2, 4 or 6) and the other is 3. We tabulate these possibilities amongst the 36 equally likely rolls. Second dice 123456 v vt | v4 v1 lv iv v vo v First dice eakene viv vv « Then the probability that the score is a mnltiple of 6 i hence (B) 23. When Jill turns, she has travelled twice as far as Jack, so her speed is twice Jack's. So when they pass, Jill has run twice the distance that Jack has walked, which means that Jack has covered + of their combined distance of 2 beach lengths. That is, Jack has walked 3 of the beach, hence (A) 24. (Also 19) We claim that it is possible to pay exactly for any amount up to 200 cents with the following 10 coins: one 1c coin, one 2c coin, two de coins, one 10¢ coin, one 20c coin, and four 40c coins. It is easy to check that the three smaller denominations can be used to pay for any amount up to 10c. It is also easy to check that the three larger denominations can be used to pay for any multiple of 10e up to 190c. Combining these two facts, we see that it is possible to pay exactly for any amount up to 200c. To see that it is not possible with just 9 coins, consider 199e. The smallest number of coins required to make 199¢ is 9, with 40-+40+40-+40+20+10-+4+4+41 = 199. However with these 9 coins, there are several amounts that are not possible, such as 2c or Ge. So 10 coins are required, hence (B) 25. Alternative 1 Using equal angles on the isosceles triangles Q and the fact that the sum of two angles on a D triangle is equal to the external angle on the other corner, we can fill in the angles shown 1 Then in APQR, 90 + «+ 3x = 180, so that r=9024=225, PA : R hence (D) 2015 AMC - Junior Solutions Alternative 2 Since APTS is isosceles, ZPST = x°, ZPTS = 180° — 2x° and ZSTQ = 2°. Since ASTQ is isosceles, ZSQT = 2x° and ZTSQ = 180° — de®. Clearly ZPRQ = 90° — 2°, and since ASQR is isosceles, ZQSR = 90° — ‘Then the three angles at $ are 2°, 180° — 42° and 90° — 2°, so that x +180 — 4x + 90-2 90 — dr 180 hence (D) 26. Let the three numbers be a, b,c, where a > b > ¢ > 0. Then a+b+e=96. Now, c is a divisor of a+6, so ¢ is a divisor of 96, and also c < 96. Likewise for a and b. So possible values for a, b and ¢ are {48, 32, 24, 16, 12,8,6,4,3,2,1}, the proper divisors of 96. Ha =48, then b +c = 48, which is only possible with b= 32, ¢ = 16. Wa < 48, then the largest possible values are a = 32, b= 24, ¢ = 16 and a+b+c = 72, so there is no solution. So a = 48,6 = 24,c = 16 is the only possible solution. Checking, a = 48 divides b+ ¢ = 48, b = 32 divides a +¢ = 64, and ¢ = 16 divides that there is exactly one possibility {16, 32, 48} and the largest number hence (48) 27. Alternative 1 Originally the ratio of Reds : Blues is 1: 2 or 2: 4. When 345 Blues leave, the ratio changes to 2: 1, therefore 345 represents a reduction in Blues by 3 parts (the Reds remain unchanged at 2 parts). Hence, one part is 115 spectators and the Reds is 2 parts or 230 spectators, hence (230) Alternative 2 Let r be the mumber of Reds, so that the original total number of spectators is 3r and the number of Blues is 2r. After 345 Blues leave the ratio of Blues to total is hence (230) Alternative 3 For every 2 Reds, there are 4 Blues before half-time, and 1 Blue who stays after half-time, so there are 3 Blues who leave. Since 345 = 3 x 115 Blues leave, there are hence (230). 2015 AMC - Junior Solutions httpvvanzexams.com http:l/anzexams.com 28. (Also MP30, UP29) Suppose the top square next to the flagpole is green. Then there may be 0, 2, 3 or 4 blue squares. Here are the possibilities in each case, Blue squares Possible flags 0 i G[ele) Jia . G ech 3 4 Along with these 11 possibilities, there are 11 where the top square next to the flagpole is blue, making 22 ways in all, hence (22) 29. Observe that if a number is larger than 333 and not a multiple of 3, then it cannot be on the list. On the other hand, it is possible for all of the remaining whole numbers larger than 0 but smaller than 1000 to be on the list: Consequently Zoltan’s list is largest when it contains all of the whole numbers from 1 to 333 as well as all of the multiples of 3 from 334 to 999. There are 333 numbers of the first type and 222 numbers of the second type, making 555 numbers in total, hence (555) 30. Thinking of a stack as a trapezium, two copies of it form a parallelogram as shown, Note that the number of rows must be less than the number of logs in each row of this parallelogram. Hence finding the possible stacks amounts to finding non-trivial factorisations of 2 x 2015 = 2 x 5 x 13 x 31 into two numbers. ‘There are 7 such factorisations of 4030: 2x 2015 5 x 806 = 10 x 403 13 x 310 26 x 155 ‘The height of the stack is the smaller factor, so 62 x 65 is the candidate for the tallest stack. Checking, the logs can be stacked in 62 rows of lengths 2.3,4,...,63, hence (62) 2015 AMC - Junior Solutions

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