2023 AIME I Problems/Problem 14

Revision as of 18:22, 10 February 2023 by Jchaoisaac (talk | contribs) (Solution (Simple cyclic permutation analysis))

Problem 14

The following analog clock has two hands that can move independently of each other.

[asy]             unitsize(2cm);             draw(unitcircle,black+linewidth(2));              for (int i = 0; i < 12; ++i) {                 draw(0.9*dir(30*i)--dir(30*i));             }             for (int i = 0; i < 4; ++i) {                 draw(0.85*dir(90*i)--dir(90*i),black+linewidth(2));             }             for (int i = 0; i < 12; ++i) {                 label("\small" + (string) i, dir(90 - i * 30) * 0.75);             }             draw((0,0)--0.6*dir(90),black+linewidth(2),Arrow(TeXHead,2bp));             draw((0,0)--0.4*dir(90),black+linewidth(2),Arrow(TeXHead,2bp)); [/asy]

Initially, both hands point to the number $12$. The clock performs a sequence of hand movements so that on each movement, one of the two hands moves clockwise to the next number on the clock face while the other hand does not move.

Let $N$ be the number of sequences of $144$ hand movements such that during the sequence, every possible positioning of the hands appears exactly once, and at the end of the $144$ movements, the hands have returned to their initial position. Find the remainder when $N$ is divided by $1000$.

Solution (Simple cyclic permutation analysis)

This is more of a solution sketch and lacks rigorous proof for interim steps, but illustrates some key observations that leads to a simple solution.


Note that one can visualize this problem as walking on a $N \times N$ grid where the edges warp. Your goal is to have a single path across all nodes on the grid leading back to $(0,\ 0)$. For convenience, any grid position are presumed to be in $\mod N$.


Note that there are exactly two ways to reach node $(i,\ j)$, namely $(i - 1,\ j)$ and $(i,\ j - 1)$.

As a result, if a path includes a step from $(i,\ j)$ to $(i + 1,\ j)$, there cannot be a step from $(i,\ j)$ to $(i,\ j + 1)$. However, a valid solution must reach $(i,\ j + 1)$, and the only valid step is from $(i - 1,\ j + 1)$.

So a solution that includes a step from $(i,\ j)$ to $(i + 1,\ j)$ dictates a step from $(i - 1,\ j + 1)$ to $(i,\ j + 1)$ and by extension steps from $(i - a,\ j + a)$ to $(i - a + 1,\ j + a)$. We observe the equivalent result for steps in the orthogonal direction.


This means that in constructing a valid solution, taking one step in fact dictates N steps, thus it's sufficient to count valid solutions with $N = a + b$ moves of going right $a$ times and $b$ times up the grid. The number of distinct solutions can be computed by permuting 2 kinds of indistinguishable objects $\binom{N}{a}$.


Here we observe, without proof, that if $\gcd(a, b) \neq 1$, then we will return to the origin prematurely. For $N = 12$, we only want to count the number of solutions associated with $12 = 1 + 11 = 5 + 7 = 7 + 5 = 11 + 1$.

(For those attempting a rigorous proof, note that $gcd(a, b) = gcd(a + b, b) = gcd(N, b) = gcd(N, a)$).


The total number of solutions, noting symmetry, is thus

\[2\cdot\left(\binom{12}{1} + \binom{12}{5}\right) = 1608\]

This yields $\boxed{\textbf{608}}$ as our desired answer.

~ cocoa @ https://www.corgillogical.com/

Solution (Matrix analysis, permutation)

Define a $12 \times 12$ matrix $X$. Each entry $x_{i, j}$ denotes the number of movements the longer hand moves, given that two hands jointly make $12 \left( i - 1 \right) + \left( j - 1 \right)$ movements. Thus, the number of movements the shorter hand moves is $12 \left( i - 1 \right) + \left( j - 1 \right) - x_{i, j}$.

Denote by $r_{i, j}$ the remainder of $x_{i, j}$ divided by 12. Denote by $R$ this remainder matrix.

If two hands can return to their initial positions after 144 movements, then $r_{12, 12} = 0$ or 11. Denote by $S_0$ (resp. $S_{11}$) the collection of feasible sequences of movements, such that $r_{12, 12} = 0$ (resp. $r_{12, 12} = 11$).

Define a function $f :  S_0 \rightarrow S_{11}$, such that for any $\left\{ x_{i,j} , \ \forall \ i, j \in \left\{ 1, 2, \cdots , 12 \right\} \right\} \in S_0$, the functional value of the entry indexed as $\left( i, j \right)$ is $12 \left( i - 1 \right) + \left( j - 1 \right) - x_{i, j}$. Thus, function $f$ is bijective. This implies $| S_0 | = | S_{11} |$.

In the rest of analysis, we count $| S_0 |$.

We make the following observations:

\begin{enumerate} \item $x_{1, 1} = 0$ and $12 | x_{12, 12}$.

These follow from the definition of $S_0$.

\item Each column of $R$ is a permutation of $\left\{ 0, 1, \cdots , 11 \right\}$.

The reasoning is as follows. Suppose there exist $i < i'$, $j$, such that $r_{i, j} = r_{i', j}$. Then this entails that the positions of two hands after the $\left( 12 \left( i' - 1 \right) + \left( j - 1 \right) \right)$th movement coincide with their positions after the $\left( 12 \left( i - 1 \right) + \left( j - 1 \right) \right)$th movement.

\item For any $j \in \left\{ 1, 2 ,\cdots , 11 \right\}$, $x_{i, j+1} - x_{i, j}$ is equal to either 0 for all $i$ or 1 for all $i$.

The reasoning is as follows. If this does not hold and the $j$th column in $R$ is a permutation of $\left\{ 0, 1, \cdots , 12 \right\}$, then the $j+1$th column is no longer a permutation of $\left\{ 0, 1, \cdots , 12 \right\}$. This leads to the infeasibility of the movements.

\item $x_{i+1, 1} = x_{i, 12}$ for any $i \in \left\{ 1, 2, \cdots , 11 \right\}$.

This follows from the conditions that the $12$th column in $R$ excluding $r_{12, 12}$ and the first column in $R$ excluding $x_{1, 1}$ are both permutations of $\left\{ 1, 2, \cdots , 11 \right\}$.

\end{enumerate}

All observations jointly imply that $x_{i, 12} = i \cdot x_{1, 12}$. Thus, $\left\{ r_{1, 12}, r_{2, 12} , \cdots , r_{11, 12} \right\}$ is a permutation of $\left\{ 1, 2, \cdots , 11 \right\}$. Thus, $x_{1, 12}$ is relatively prime to 12.

Because $x_{1, 1} = 0$ and $x_{1, 12} - x_{1, 1} \leq 11$, we have $x_{1, 12} = 1$, 5, 7, or 11.

Recall that when we move from $x_{1, 1}$ to $x_{1, 12}$, there are 11 steps of movements. Each movement has $x_{1, j+1} - x_{i, j} = 0$ or 1. Thus, for each given $x_{1, 12}$, the number of feasible movements from $x_{1, 1}$ to $x_{1, 12}$ is $\binom{11}{x_{1, 12}}$.

Therefore, the total number of feasible movement sequences in this problem is \begin{align*} | S_0 | + | S_{11} | & = 2 | S_0 | \\ & = 2 \cdot \sum_{x_{1, 12} = 1, 5, 7, 11} \binom{11}{x_{1, 12}} \\ & = 2 \left( 11 + 462 + 330 + 1 \right) \\ & = 1608 . \end{align*}

Therefore, the answer is $\boxed{\textbf{(608) }}$.

~Steven Chen (Professor Chen Education Palace, www.professorchenedu.com)

Video Solution

https://youtu.be/3DtJB78aua4

~Steven Chen (Professor Chen Education Palace, www.professorchenedu.com)

See also

2023 AIME I (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 13
Followed by
Problem 15
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
All AIME Problems and Solutions

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