1970 IMO Problems/Problem 6
Problem
In a plane there are points, no three of which are collinear. Consider all possible triangles having these point as vertices. Prove that no more than
of these triangles are acute-angled.
Solution
At most of the triangles formed by
points can be acute. It follows that at most
out of the
triangles formed by any
points can be acute. For given
points, the maximum number of acute triangles is: the number of subsets of
points times
. The total number of triangles is the same expression with the first
replaced by
. Hence at most
of the
, or
, can be acute, and hence at most $$ (Error compiling LaTeX. Unknown error_msg)7 can be acute.
The same argument now extends the result to
points. The maximum number of acute triangles formed by
points is: the number of subsets of
points times
. The total number of triangles is the same expression with
replaced by
. Hence at most
of the triangles are acute.
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