2018 AIME II Problems/Problem 8: Difference between revisions
| Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
<math>(0,0): 1</math> | <math>(0,0): 1</math> | ||
<math>(1,0)=(0,1)= | <math>(1,0)=(0,1)=1</math> | ||
< | <math>(2,0)=(0, 2)=2</math> | ||
< | <math>(3,0)=(0, 3)=3</math> | ||
< | <math>(4,0)=(0, 4)=5</math> | ||
< | <math>(1,1)=2</math>, <math>(1,2)=(2,1)=5</math>, <math>(1,3)=(3,1)=10</math>, <math>(1,4)=(4,1)= 20</math> | ||
< | <math>(2,2)=14, (2,3)=(3,2)=32, (2,4)=(4,2)=71</math> | ||
< | <math>(3,3)=84, (3,4)=(4,3)=207</math> | ||
< | <math>(4,4)=2\cdot \left( (4,2)+(4,3)\right) = 2\cdot \left( 207+71\right)=2\cdot 278=\boxed{556}</math> | ||
==Solution 2== | ==Solution 2== | ||
Revision as of 06:38, 27 March 2018
Problem
A frog is positioned at the origin of the coordinate plane. From the point
, the frog can jump to any of the points
,
,
, or
. Find the number of distinct sequences of jumps in which the frog begins at
and ends at
.
Solution 1
We solve this problem by working backwards. Notice, the only points the frog can be on to jump to
in one move are
and
. This applies to any other point, thus we can work our way from
to
, recording down the number of ways to get to each point recursively.
,
,
,
Solution 2
We'll refer to the moves
,
,
, and
as
,
,
, and
, respectively. Then the possible sequences of moves that will take the frog from
to
are all the permutations of
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
, and
. We can reduce the number of cases using symmetry.
Case 1:
There are
possibilities for this case.
Case 2:
or
There are
possibilities for this case.
Case 3:
There are
possibilities for this case.
Case 4:
or
There are
possibilities for this case.
Case 5:
or
There are
possibilities for this case.
Case 6:
There are
possibilities for this case.
Adding up all these cases gives us
ways.
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