An abstract artist took a wooden \(5\times 5\times 5\) cube and divided each face into unit squares. He painted each square in one of three colours – black, white, and red – so that there were no horizontally or vertically adjacent squares of the same colour. What is the smallest possible number of squares the artist could have painted black following this rule? Unit squares which share a side are considered adjacent both when the squares lie on the same face and when they lie on adjacent faces.
a) There is an unlimited set of cards with the words “abc”, “bca”, “cab” written. Of these, the word written is determined according to this rule. For the initial word, any card can be selected, and then on each turn to the existing word, you can either add on a card to the left or to the right, or cut the word anywhere (between the letters) and put a card there. Is it possible to make a palindrome with this method?
b) There is an unlimited set of red cards with the words “abc”, “bca”, “cab” and blue cards with the words “cba”, “acb”, “bac”. Using them, according to the same rules, a palindrome was made. Is it true that the same number of red and blue cards were used?
A cubic polynomial \(f (x)\) is given. Let’s find a group of three different numbers \((a, b, c)\) such that \(f (a)= b\), \(f (b) = c\) and \(f (c) = a\). It is known that there were eight such groups \([a_i, b_i, c_i]\), \(i = 1, 2, \dots , 8\), which contains 24 different numbers. Prove that among eight numbers of the form \(a_i + b_i + c_i\) at least three are different.
For the anniversary of the London Mathematical Olympiad, the mint coined three commemorative coins. One coin turned out correctly, the second coin on both sides had two heads, and the third had tails on both sides. The director of the mint, without looking, chose one of these three coins and tossed it at random. She got heads. What is the probability that the second side of this coin also has heads?
In a convex hexagon, independently of each other, two random diagonals are chosen. Find the probability that these diagonals intersect inside the hexagon (inside – that is, not at the vertex).
The shooter shoots at 3 targets until he shoots everything. The probability of a hit with one shot is \(p\).
a) Find the probability that he needs exactly 5 shots.
b) Find the mathematical expectation of the number of shots.
Ten tennis players came to the competitions, 4 of them were from Russia. According to the rules for the first round, the tennis players are broken into pairs randomly. Find the probability that in the first round, all Russian tennis players will play only with other Russian tennis players.
In the triangle \(ABC\), the angle \(A\) is equal to \(40^{\circ}\). The triangle is randomly thrown onto a table. Find the probability that the vertex \(A\) lies east of the other two vertices.
At the power plant, rectangles that are 2 m long and 1 m wide are produced. The length of the objects is measured by the worker Howard, and the width, irrespective of Howard, is measured by the worker Rachel. The average error is zero for both, but Howard allows a standard measurement error (standard deviation of length) of 3 mm, and Rachel allows a standard error of 2 mm.
a) Find the mathematical expectation of the area of the resulting rectangle.
b) Find the standard deviation of the area of the resulting rectangle in centimetres squared.
At a factory known to us, we cut out metal disks with a diameter of 1 m. It is known that a disk with a diameter of exactly 1 m weighs exactly 100 kg. During manufacturing, a measurement error occurs, and therefore the standard deviation of the radius is 10 mm. Engineer Gavin believes that a stack of 100 disks on average will weigh 10,000 kg. By how much is the engineer Gavin wrong?