2015 AMC 8 Problems/Problem 20
Contents
Problem
Ralph went to the store and bought 12 pairs of socks for a total of . Some of the socks he bought cost
a pair, some of the socks he bought cost
a pair, and some of the socks he bought cost
a pair. If he bought at least one pair of each type, how many pairs of
socks did Ralph buy?
Solutions
Solution 1
So, let there be pairs of
socks,
pairs of
socks, and
pairs of
socks.
We have ,
, and
.
Now, we subtract to find , and
.
It follows that
is a multiple of
and
is a multiple of
. Since sum of 2 multiples of 3 = multiple of 3, so we must have
.
Therefore, , and it follows that
. Now,
, as desired.
Solution 2
Since the total cost of the socks was and Ralph bought
pairs, the average cost of each pair of socks is
.
There are two ways to make packages of socks that average to . You can have:
Two
pairs and one
pair (package adds up to
)
One
pair and one
pair (package adds up to
)
Now, we need to solve
where
is the number of
packages and
is the number of
packages. We see our only solution (that has at least one of each pair of sock) is
, which yields the answer of
.
Solution 3
Since there are 12 pairs of socks, and Ralph bought at least one pair of each, there are pairs of socks left. Also, the sum of the three pairs of socks is
. This means that there are
dollars left. If there are only
dollar socks left, then we would have
dollars wasted, which leaves
more dollars. If we replace one pair with a
dollar pair, then we would waste an additional
dollars. If we replace one pair with a
dollar pair, then we would waste an additional
dollars. The only way
can be represented as a sum of
s and
s is
. If we change
pairs, we would have
pairs left. Adding the one pair from previously, we have
pairs.
Solution 4
Let the amount of dollar socks be
,
dollar socks be
, and
dollar socks be
. We then know that
and
. We can make
into
and then plug that into the other equation, producing
which simplifies to
. It's not hard to see
and
. Now that we know
and
, we know that
, meaning the number of
dollar socks Ralph bought is
.
Solution 5 (Guess and check)
If Ralph bought one sock of each kind, he already used , so there are
left and 9 socks. If we split the
into four
sections, (as it is the smallest possible number that 1, 3, 4, can make in different ways that in all use at least each of the numbers once,) if Ralph bought a
pair, he would need to buy a
pair in order for it to add up to a multiple of four. Similarly, if Ralph bought a
pair, he would either need to buy three
pairs or a
pair. If Ralph bought a
pair, it would already make a group. Now, the problem is just how we can split 9 into 4 groups of 1, 2, or 4. We clearly see that
, or a
pair, two
pairs, and six
pairs. Because we subtracted the necessary one of each kind, there are two
pairs, three
pairs, and seven
pairs. Therefore, the number of
pairs Ralph bought is
.
~strongstephen
Video Solution (HOW TO THINK CRITICALLY!!!)
~Education, the Study of Everything
Video Solution
~savannahsolver
Video Solution by OmegaLearn
https://youtu.be/rQUwNC0gqdg?t=2187
~pi_is_3.14
Video Solution by SpreadTheMathLove
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TpsuRedYOiM&t=250s
See Also
2015 AMC 8 (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 19 |
Followed by Problem 21 | |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 • 16 • 17 • 18 • 19 • 20 • 21 • 22 • 23 • 24 • 25 | ||
All AJHSME/AMC 8 Problems and Solutions |
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