Every week on the department monitors will be a Math problem of the week. Do you have what it takes to solve these problems? Soultions and past problems will be posted here every week.

April 25, 2022

Suppose you have a circle, a diameter, and a point inside the circle not on the diameter. Using only a straightedge, construct the perpendicular from the point to the diameter.

April 11, 2022

Evaluate the 123rd derivative of 1/(x^2-x) at x=2

Answer: Write 1/(x^2 - x) =  1/(x-1) - 1/x. Differentiate each term separately, then evaluate at x=2 to get (123!)(-1 + 1/2^124).

April 4, 2022

You have one flask that holds 11 cups of water and another flask that holds 19 cups. You need to measure 1 cup of water for the recipe you are making. How can you do this?

Answer: Notice that 7x11 - 4x19 = 1, so if you fill the 11-cup flask 7 times and empty the 19-cup flask 4 times, you'll have 1 cup remaining. So do the following: Let's call the 11-cup flask E and the 19-cup flask N. Fill E and pour it into N.
Then fill E again and pour as much as possible, namely 8 cups, into N, leaving 3 cups in E. Empty N and pour these 3 cups into N. Fill E and pour into N. Then fill E again and pour as much as possible, namely 5 cups, into N. This leaves 6 in E. Empty N and pour in these 6 cups. Now fill E and pour it into N, giving 17 cups there. Then fill E and pour 2 more cups into N, leaving 9 in E. Empty N, pour in these 9 cups, refill E, and pour as much as possible, namely 10 cups, into N. This leaves one cup in E.

March 14, 2022

Let f(x) = x + sin(x). Compute f(1), then f(f(1)), then f(f(f(1))), etc. What is the limit of this sequence?

Answer: The fourth term of the series is already 3.1415926. The main step in general is to use Taylor series with remainder to show that f(x) = x + sin(x) differs from pi by at most (1/6)(x - pi)^3. Therefore, the sequence gets closer and closer to pi.

March 7, 2022

Cut a round pizza by five straightline cuts. Moving pieces is not allowed between cuts. What is the largest number of pieces you can get?

Answer: The nth cut can cross up to n-1 of the previous cuts, which means it can divide at most n regions into 2 pieces, thus adding n regions to the total. There is one region to start with, so the largest possible total after 5 cuts is 1+1+2+3+4+5=16.

February 28, 2022

University of Maryland uniforms come in four different colors. In how many ways can a team suit up for five consecutive games so that no adjacent games use the same color? (everyone on the team wears one color for a game).

Answer: There are 4 possibilities for the first game, and then 3 for each of the next four games. This gives:
4*3*3*3*3 = 324 ways

February 22, 2022

Look at the last two digits of the powers of 2: 01, 02, 04, 08, 16, etc.
How many distinct numbers do you get?

Answer : 22
Explaination: One way is to list the powers until they repeat: 01, 02, 04, 08, 16, . . . , 76, 52, 04. Another way is to use Euler's theorem from number theory to conclude that the powers of 2 repeat mod 25 every 20 steps. After 01 and 02, all the numbers are multiples of 4, so the powers of 2 repeat mod 100 every 20 steps after the initial two powers.

Archives: F2011-S2012 F2012-S2013 F2013-S2014 F2014-S2015 F2015-S2016 F2016-S2017 F2017-S2018 F2018-S2019 F2019-S2020 F2020-S2021 F2021-S2022 F2022-S2023 F2023-S2024 F2024-S2025 

  • Gravity driven traveling bore wave solutions to the free boundary incompressible Navier-Stokes equations

    Speaker: Noah Stevenson (Princeton)

    When: Thu, September 18, 2025 - 3:30pm
    Where: MTH3206
  • Global dynamics for the derivative nonlinear Schrodinger equation

    Speaker: Allison Byars (Wisconsin-Madison)

    When: Thu, September 25, 2025 - 3:30pm
    Where: MTH3206
  • Resolution analysis in some scattering problems and enhanced resolution in certain scenarios

    Speaker: Raymond Tin Chow (UC Riverside)

    When: Thu, October 16, 2025 - 3:30pm
    Where: MTH 3206
  • Exponential and algebraic decay in Euler-alignment system with nonlocal interaction forces

    Speaker: Young-Pil Choi (Yonsei University, Korea)

    When: Thu, October 23, 2025 - 3:30pm
    Where: MTH3206
  • On Backwards uniqueness for singular mean curvature flows

    Speaker: Or Hershkovits (UMD)

    When: Thu, October 30, 2025 - 3:30pm
    Where: MTH3206
  • Unconditional well-posedness for the periodic Kawahara equation

    Speaker: Dan Geba (University of Rochester)

    When: Thu, November 6, 2025 - 3:30pm
    Where: MTH3206
  • Nash inequalities and boundary behavior of kinetic equations

    Speaker: Christopher Henderson (UMD)

    When: Thu, November 13, 2025 - 3:30am
    Where: MTH3206
  • TBA

    Speaker: Benjamin Harrop-Griffiths

    When: Thu, November 20, 2025 - 3:30pm
    Where: MTH3206