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1995 AIME Problems/Problem 11

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Problem

A right rectangular prism P_{} (i.e., a rectangular parallelpiped) has sides of integral length a, b, c, with a\le b\le c. A plane parallel to one of the faces of P_{} cuts P_{} into two prisms, one of which is similar to P_{}, and both of which have nonzero volume. Given that b=1995, for how many ordered triples (a, b, c) does such a plane exist?

Solution

Let P' be the prism similar to P, and let the sides of P' be of length x,y,z, such that x \le y \le z. Then

\frac{x}{a} = \frac{y}{b} = \frac zc < 1.

Note that if the ratio of similarity was equal to 1, we would have a prism with zero volume. As one face of P' is a face of P, it follows that P and P' share at least two side lengths in common. Since x < a, y < b, z < c, it follows that the only possibility is y=a,z=b=1995. Then,

\frac{x}{a} = \frac{a}{1995} = \frac{1995}{c} \Longrightarrow ac = 1995^2 = 3^25^27^219^2.

The number of factors of 3^25^27^219^2 is (2+1)(2+1)(2+1)(2+1) = 81. Only in \left\lfloor \frac {81}2 \right\rfloor = 40 of these cases is a < c (for a=c, we end with a prism of zero volume). We can easily verify that these will yield nondegenerate prisms, so the answer is \boxed{040}.

See also

1995 AIME (ProblemsResources)
Preceded by
Problem 10
Followed by
Problem 12
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
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