Extreme principle/solutions
These are the solutions to the problems on the extreme principle.
1
First, we note that it is impossible for a coin to be tangent to six coins
if each of the
is bigger than
.
Now consider the smallest coin. By the above observation, it is tangent to at most five of the others.
2
Assume that there is such a palindrome. It is required that . Let
be the maximum positive integer, and
the maximum positive digit, such that
. Then, the substring
appears in the palindrome. This implies that its reverse, the substring
also appears in the palindrome. The substring of
zeros in this, must be entirely part of the decimal representation of one the integers that get appended to form the palindrome. This is because decimal representations of positive integers do no begin with
. That integer must be smaller than
. Therefore it must be of the form
, with
, and be followed in the palindrome by a digit
. It cannot be, that
, since after
it should be appended
. It cannot be that
, in other words that the number
is its own reverse inside the palindrome, since before it there should be
and after it
, which cannot turn into each other when the palindrome is reversed.