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Problem 1In July 1861, inches of rain fell in Cherrapunji, India. What was the average rainfall in inches per hour during that month?
Problem 2Which of the following numbers has the largest reciprocal?
Problem 3The smallest sum one could get by adding three different numbers from the set is
Problem 4The product is closest to
Problem 5A contest began at noon one day and ended minutes later. At what time did the contest end?
Problem 6Problem 7How many whole numbers are between and ?
Problem 8In the product shown, is a digit. The value of is
Problem 9Using only the paths and the directions shown, how many different routes are there from to ?
Problem 10A picture feet across is hung in the center of a wall that is feet wide. How many feet from the end of the wall is the nearest edge of the picture?
Problem 11If means , then is
Problem 12The table below displays the grade distribution of the students in a mathematics class on the last two tests. For example, exactly one student received a 'D' on Test 1 and a 'C' on Test 2 (see circled entry). What percent of the students received the same grade on both tests?
Problem 13The perimeter of the polygon shown is
Problem 14If and , then the largest value of the quotient is
Problem 15Sale prices at the Ajax Outlet Store are below original prices. On Saturdays an additional discount of off the sale price is given. What is the Saturday price of a coat whose original price is $?
$
$
$
$
$
Problem 16A bar graph shows the number of hamburgers sold by a fast food chain each season. However, the bar indicating the number sold during the winter is covered by a smudge. If exactly of the chain's hamburgers are sold in the fall, how many million hamburgers are sold in the winter?
Problem 17Let be an odd whole number and let be any whole number. Which of the following statements about the whole number is always true?
Problem 18A rectangular grazing area is to be fenced off on three sides using part of a meter rock wall as the fourth side. Fence posts are to be placed every meters along the fence including the two posts where the fence meets the rock wall. What is the fewest number of posts required to fence an area m by m?
Problem 19At the beginning of a trip, the mileage odometer read miles. The driver filled the gas tank with gallons of gasoline. During the trip, the driver filled his tank again with gallons of gasoline when the odometer read . At the end of the trip, the driver filled his tank again with gallons of gasoline. The odometer read . To the nearest tenth, what was the car's average miles-per-gallon for the entire trip?
Problem 20The value of the expression is closest to
Problem 21Suppose one of the eight lettered identical squares is included with the four squares in the T-shaped figure outlined. How many of the resulting figures can be folded into a topless cubical box?
Problem 22Alan, Beth, Carlos, and Diana were discussing their possible grades in mathematics class this grading period. Alan said, "If I get an A, then Beth will get an A." Beth said, "If I get an A, then Carlos will get an A." Carlos said, "If I get an A, then Diana will get an A." All of these statements were true, but only two of the students received an A. Which two received A's?
Problem 23The large circle has diameter . The two small circles have their centers on and just touch at , the center of the large circle. If each small circle has radius , what is the value of the ratio of the area of the shaded region to the area of one of the small circles?
Problem 24The students at King Middle School are divided into three groups of equal size for lunch. Each group has lunch at a different time. A computer randomly assigns each student to one of three lunch groups. The probability that three friends, Al, Bob, and Carol, will be assigned to the same lunch group is approximately
Problem 25Which of the following sets of whole numbers has the largest average?
1986 AMC8真题答案详细解析1.We can express the number of inches of rain in a ratio, . We need to find to find the number of hours, but first we need to find the number of days. We know there are 31 days in July, so we getWe know there are 24 hours in a day, so we get
And simplifying gets us , which is .
Note that in the simplifying step, we noted that the month and day units cancel, leaving us with only inches per hour.
2.For positive numbers, the larger the number, the smaller its reciprocal. Likewise, smaller numbers have larger reciprocals.
Thus, all we have to do is find the smallest number.
But which one is it? ? or ? We see that , and , so obviously is smaller.
3.To find the smallest sum, we just have to find the smallest 3 numbers and add them together.
Obviously, the numbers are , and adding them gets us .
4.
Approximating instead of is more effective because larger numbers are less affected by absolute changes (e.g is much closer relatively to than is to ). is the closest to , so the answer is .
5.There are minutes in an hour. So, we can easily eliminate some of the choices by noting that noon is exactly minutes away from midnight. Since , we know that it cannot be A or B. Because midnight is minutes away, we know that the contest ended minutes after midnight. The highest multiple of 60 that will fit into is , which is , and the remainder is minutes, meaning that the contest ended at
is
6.Just simplify the bottom as , getting us , with which we multiply top and bottom by 3, we get , or
7.No... of course you're not supposed to know what the square root of 8 is, or the square root of 80. There aren't any formulas, either. Approximation seems like the best strategy.
Clearly it must be true that for any positive integers , , and with ,
If we let , , and , then we get
Therefore, the smallest whole number between and is .
Similarly, if we let , , and , we get
So is the largest whole number between and .
So we know that we just have to find the number of integers from 3 to 8 inclusive. If we subtract 2 from every number in this set (which doesn't change the number of integers in the set at all), we find that now all we need to do is find the number of integers there are from 1 to 6, which is obviously 6.
8.Note that in any multiplication problem, the only 2 digits that will influence the last digit of the number will be the last digits of each number being multiplied.
So, has a units digit of , so is either or . If , then the product is , which is clearly too small, so
9.There is 1 way to get from C to N. There is only one way to get from D to N, which is DCN.
Since A can only go to C or D, which each only have 1 way to get to N each, there are ways to get from A to N.
Since B can only go to A, C or N, and A only has 2 ways to get to N, C only has 1 way and to get from B to N is only 1 way, there are ways to get from B to N.
M can only go to either B or A, A has 2 ways and B has 4 ways, so M has ways to get to N.
6 is .
A diagram labeled with the number of ways to get to from each point might look like
10.Let's say that the distance from the picture to the wall is . Since that distance will be on both sides of the picture (it's in the exact middle), we can say that
11.
We just plug in and evaluate:
12.We need to find the number of those who did get the same on both tests over 30 (the number of students in the class).
So, we have
Which simplifies to
13.
Solution 1For the segments parallel to the side with side length 8, let's call those two segments and , the longer segment being , the shorter one being .
For the segments parallel to the side with side length 6, let's call those two segments and , the longer segment being , the shorter one being .
So the perimeter of the polygon would be...
Note that , and .
Now we plug those in:
28 is .
Solution 2The perimeter of the requested region is the same as the perimeter of the rectangle with the dashed portion. This makes the answer
14. will be largest if is the largest it can be, and is the smallest it can be.
Since can be no larger than , . Since can be no less than , .
is
15.First we need to do the first discount, which, at Ajax Outlet Store, would be there any day of the week.
If we discount , then will be left, so after the second discount, we get
16.What we want to find is the number of hamburgers sold in the winter. Since we don't know what it is, let's call it . From the graph, we know that in Spring, 4.5 million hamburgers were sold, in the Summer was 5 million and in the Fall was 4 million. We know that the number of hamburgers sold in Fall is exactly of the total number of hamburgers sold, so we can say that...
The answer is 2.5, or
17.
Solution 1We can solve this problem using logic.
Let's say that is odd. If is odd, then obviously will be odd as well, since is odd, and the product of two odd numbers is odd. Since is odd, will also be odd. And adding two odd numbers makes an even number, so if is odd, the entire expression is even.
Let's say that is even. If is even, then will be even as well, because the product of an odd and an even is even. will still be odd. That means that the entire expression will be odd, since the sum of an odd and an even is odd.
Looking at the multiple choices, we see that our second case fits choice E exactly.
Solution 2We are given that , so in mod we havewhich is odd only if is even
18.The shortest possible rectangle that has sides 36 and 60 would be if the side opposite the wall was 60.
Each of the sides of length 36 contribute fence posts and the side of length 60 contributes fence posts, so there are fence posts.
However, the two corners where a 36 foot fence meets an 60 foot fence are counted twice, so there are actually fence posts.
19.The first six gallons are irrelevant. We start with the odometer at miles, and a full gas tank. The total gas consumed by the car during the trip is equal to the total gas the driver had to buy to make the tank full again, i.e., gallons. The distance covered is miles. Hence the average MPG ratio is .
20.
Which is closest to .
(The original expression is approximately equal to .)
21.
Solution 1The four squares we already have assemble nicely into four sides of the cube. Let the central one be the bottom, and fold the other three upwards to get the front, right, and back side. Currently, our box is missing its left side and its top side. We have to count the possibilities that would fold to one of these two places.
would be the top side - OK
would be the left side - OK
would cause the figure to not be foldable at all
would be the left side - OK
would be the top side - OK
is the same case as - OK
is the same case as
is the same case as - OK
In total, there are good possibilities.
Solution 2Fold the four squares into the four sides of a cube. Then, there are six edges "open" (for lack of better term). For each open edge, we can add a square/side, so the answer is .
22.Let's say that Alan gets an A. Well, from his statement, then Beth would also get an A. But from her statement, Carlos would get an A. And from his statement, Diana would also get an A. So all 4 would get A's, but the problem said only 2 got A's.
Let's say that Beth gets an A. From her statement, we know that Carlos get an A, and from his statement we know that Diana gets an A. But that makes 3, which is not 2.
If Carlos gets an A, then Diana gets an A. That makes 2, so is the right answer. Note that although Beth said "If I get an A, then Carlos will get an A.", that does NOT mean that "If Carlos gets an A, then I will get an A."
23.
The small circle has radius , thus its area is .
The large circle has radius , thus its area is .
The area of the semicircle above is then .
The part that is not shaded are two small semicircles. Together, these form one small circle, hence their total area is . This means that the area of the shaded part is . This is equal to the area of a small circle, hence the correct answer is .
24.
Imagine that we run the computer many times. In roughly of all cases, Bob will be assigned to the same group as Al was. Out of these, in roughly cases Carol will be assigned to the same group as her friends. Thus the probability that all three are in the same group is , or .
(The exact value is , which is less than our approximate answer.)
Solution 2There are ways to choose which group the three kids are in and the chance that all three are in the same group is . Hence or .
Solution 3One of the statements, that there are students in the school is redundant. Taking that there are students and there are groups, we can easily deduce there are ways to group the students, and there are ways to group them in the same group, so we might think is the answer but as there are 3 groups we do which is .
25.
Solution 1From to there are (see floor function) multiples of , and their average is
Similarly, we can find that the average of the multiples of between and is , the average of the multiples of is , the average of the multiples of is , and the average of the multiples of is , so the one with the largest average is Solution 2The multiples of any number in any range form an arithmetic sequence. It can be proven that the average of the numbers in an arithmetic sequence is simply the average of their highest and lowest entries, so you can just add the first term and the last term, and see which one is the largest (since the sum of two numbers is twice their average). 2+100=102, 3+99=102, 4+100=104, 5+100=105, 6+96=102. Therefore, the answer is multiples of five because it has the largest number.
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