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
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
.
Let
be a sequence such that
for all non-negative integers
.
- 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)
- 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)
Let
and
be two sequences such that
and

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