Beaver Math Olympiad: Difference between revisions

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'''Beaver Mathematical Olympiad''' (BMO) is an attempt to re-formulate the halting problem for some particular Turing machines as a mathematical problem in a style suitable for a hypothetical math olympiad.  
'''Beaver Mathematical Olympiad''' (BMO) is an attempt to re-formulate the halting problem for some particular Turing machines as a mathematical problem in a style suitable for a hypothetical math olympiad.  


The purpose of the BMO is twofold. First, statements where every non-essential details (e.g. related to tape encoding, number of steps, etc) are discarded are more suitable to be shared with mathematicians who perhaps are able to help. Second, it's a way to jokingly highlight how a hard question could appear deceptively simple.
The purpose of the BMO is twofold. First, statements where non-essential details (related to tape encoding, number of steps, etc.) are discarded are more suitable to be shared with mathematicians who perhaps are able to help. Second, it's a way to jokingly highlight how a hard question could appear deceptively simple.


== Unsolved problems ==
== Unsolved problems ==


=== [[1RB1RE_1LC0RA_0RD1LB_---1RC_1LF1RE_0LB0LE]] ===
=== 1. {{TM|1RB1RE_1LC0RA_0RD1LB_---1RC_1LF1RE_0LB0LE|undecided}} ===


Let <math>(a_n)_{n \ge 1}</math> and <math>(b_n)_{n \ge 1}</math> be two sequences such that <math>(a_1, b_1) = (1, 2)</math> and
Let <math>(a_n)_{n \ge 1}</math> and <math>(b_n)_{n \ge 1}</math> be two sequences such that <math>(a_1, b_1) = (1, 2)</math> and
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for all positive integers <math>n</math>. Does there exist a positive integer <math>i</math> such that <math>a_i = b_i</math>?
for all positive integers <math>n</math>. Does there exist a positive integer <math>i</math> such that <math>a_i = b_i</math>?


=== [[Hydra]] and [[Antihydra]] ===
The first 10 values of <math>(a_n, b_n)</math> are <math>(1, 2), (3, 1), (2, 6), (5, 4), (1, 18), (3, 17), (7, 14), (15, 7), (8, 30), (17, 22)</math>.
 
=== 2. [[Hydra]] and [[Antihydra]] ===


Let <math>(a_n)_{n \ge 0}</math> be a sequence such that <math>a_{n+1} = a_n+\left\lfloor\frac{a_n}{2}\right\rfloor</math> for all non-negative integers <math>n</math>.
Let <math>(a_n)_{n \ge 0}</math> be a sequence such that <math>a_{n+1} = a_n+\left\lfloor\frac{a_n}{2}\right\rfloor</math> for all non-negative integers <math>n</math>.
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# If <math>a_0=3</math>, does there exist a non-negative integer <math>k</math> such that the list of numbers <math>a_0, a_1, a_2, \dots, a_k</math> have more than twice as many even numbers as odd numbers? ([[Hydra]])
# If <math>a_0=3</math>, does there exist a non-negative integer <math>k</math> such that the list of numbers <math>a_0, a_1, a_2, \dots, a_k</math> have more than twice as many even numbers as odd numbers? ([[Hydra]])
# If <math>a_0=8</math>, does there exist a non-negative integer <math>k</math> such that the list of numbers <math>a_0, a_1, a_2, \dots, a_k</math> have more than twice as many odd numbers as even numbers? ([[Antihydra]])
# If <math>a_0=8</math>, does there exist a non-negative integer <math>k</math> such that the list of numbers <math>a_0, a_1, a_2, \dots, a_k</math> have more than twice as many odd numbers as even numbers? ([[Antihydra]])
=== 5. {{TM|1RB0LD_1LC0RA_1RA1LB_1LA1LE_1RF0LC_---0RE|undecided}} ===
Let <math>(a_n)_{n \ge 1}</math> and <math>(b_n)_{n \ge 1}</math> be two sequences such that <math>(a_1, b_1) = (0, 5)</math> and
<math display="block">(a_{n+1}, b_{n+1}) = \begin{cases}
(a_n+1, b_n-f(a_n)) & \text{if } b_n \ge f(a_n) \\
(a_n, 3b_n+a_n+5) & \text{if } b_n < f(a_n)
\end{cases}</math>
where <math>f(x)=10\cdot 2^x-1</math> for all non-negative integers <math>x</math>.
Does there exist a positive integer <math>i</math> such that <math>b_i = f(a_i)-1</math>?


== Solved problems ==
== Solved problems ==


=== {{TM|1RB0RB3LA4LA2RA_2LB3RA---3RA4RB}} and {{TM|1RB1RB3LA4LA2RA_2LB3RA---3RA4RB}} ===
=== 3. {{TM|1RB0RB3LA4LA2RA_2LB3RA---3RA4RB|non-halt}} and {{TM|1RB1RB3LA4LA2RA_2LB3RA---3RA4RB|non-halt}} ===


Let <math>v_2(n)</math> be the largest integer <math>k</math> such that <math>2^k</math> divides <math>n</math>. Let <math>(a_n)_{n \ge 0}</math> be a sequence such that
Let <math>v_2(n)</math> be the largest integer <math>k</math> such that <math>2^k</math> divides <math>n</math>. Let <math>(a_n)_{n \ge 0}</math> be a sequence such that
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Link to Discord discussion: https://discord.com/channels/960643023006490684/1084047886494470185/1252634913220591728
Link to Discord discussion: https://discord.com/channels/960643023006490684/1084047886494470185/1252634913220591728


=== {{TM|1RB3RB---1LB0LA_2LA4RA3LA4RB1LB}} ===
=== 4. {{TM|1RB3RB---1LB0LA_2LA4RA3LA4RB1LB|non-halt}} ===


Bonnie the beaver was bored, so she tried to construct a sequence of integers <math>\{a_n\}_{n \ge 0}</math>. She first defined <math>a_0=2</math>, then defined <math>a_{n+1}</math> depending on <math>a_n</math> and <math>n</math> using the following rules:
Bonnie the beaver was bored, so she tried to construct a sequence of integers <math>\{a_n\}_{n \ge 0}</math>. She first defined <math>a_0=2</math>, then defined <math>a_{n+1}</math> depending on <math>a_n</math> and <math>n</math> using the following rules:
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This closed-form solution can be proven correct by induction. Unfortunately, the induction may require a lot of tedious calculations.
This closed-form solution can be proven correct by induction. Unfortunately, the induction may require a lot of tedious calculations.


In all 4 cases, we have <math>a_n \equiv 0\text{ (mod 3)}</math> or <math>a_n \equiv 2\text{ (mod 3)}</math>. Therefore, Bonnie will never finish.
For all <math>k</math>, we have <math>a_{4k} \equiv 2\text{ (mod 3)}</math> and <math>a_{4k+1} \equiv a_{4k+2} \equiv a_{4k+3} \equiv 0\text{ (mod 3)}</math>. Therefore, Bonnie will never finish.
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Latest revision as of 11:57, 3 July 2025

Beaver Mathematical Olympiad (BMO) is an attempt to re-formulate the halting problem for some particular Turing machines as a mathematical problem in a style suitable for a hypothetical math olympiad.

The purpose of the BMO is twofold. First, statements where non-essential details (related to tape encoding, number of steps, etc.) are discarded are more suitable to be shared with mathematicians who perhaps are able to help. Second, it's a way to jokingly highlight how a hard question could appear deceptively simple.

Unsolved problems

1. 1RB1RE_1LC0RA_0RD1LB_---1RC_1LF1RE_0LB0LE (bbch)

Let and be two sequences such that and

for all positive integers . Does there exist a positive integer such that ?

The first 10 values of are .

2. Hydra and Antihydra

Let be a sequence such that for all non-negative integers .

  1. If , does there exist a non-negative integer such that the list of numbers have more than twice as many even numbers as odd numbers? (Hydra)
  2. If , does there exist a non-negative integer such that the list of numbers have more than twice as many odd numbers as even numbers? (Antihydra)

5. 1RB0LD_1LC0RA_1RA1LB_1LA1LE_1RF0LC_---0RE (bbch)

Let and be two sequences such that and

where for all non-negative integers .

Does there exist a positive integer such that ?

Solved problems

3. 1RB0RB3LA4LA2RA_2LB3RA---3RA4RB (bbch) and 1RB1RB3LA4LA2RA_2LB3RA---3RA4RB (bbch)

Let be the largest integer such that divides . Let be a sequence such that

for all non-negative integers . Is there an integer such that for some positive integer ?

Link to Discord discussion: https://discord.com/channels/960643023006490684/1084047886494470185/1252634913220591728

4. 1RB3RB---1LB0LA_2LA4RA3LA4RB1LB (bbch)

Bonnie the beaver was bored, so she tried to construct a sequence of integers . She first defined , then defined depending on and using the following rules:

  • If , then .
  • If , then .

With these two rules alone, Bonnie calculates the first few terms in the sequence: . At this point, Bonnie plans to continue writing terms until a term becomes . If Bonnie sticks to her plan, will she ever finish?

Solution

How to guess the closed-form solution: Firstly, notice that . Secondly, calculate the error term . The error term appears to have a period of 4. This leads to the following guess:

This closed-form solution can be proven correct by induction. Unfortunately, the induction may require a lot of tedious calculations.

For all , we have and . Therefore, Bonnie will never finish.