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The document provides important facts, formulas, and tricks related to MATHCOUNTS competitions including information about prime numbers, fractions, perfect squares, formulas, and more.

Formulas for perimeter, area, volume, slope, distance, and more are provided.

Methods for representing numbers in bases 2, 3, and 16 are given as examples.

MATHCOUNTS

TOOLBOX
Facts, Formulas and Tricks

MATHCOUNTS Coaching Kit 40


I. PRIME NUMBERS from 1 through 100 (1 is not prime!)
2 3 5 7
11 13 17 19
23 29
31 37
41 43 47
53 59
61 67
71 73 79
83 89
97

II. FRACTIONS DECIMALS PERCENTS


1
/2 .5 50 %
1
/3 .3 33 .3 %
2
/3 .6 66 .6 %
1
/4 .25 25 %
3
/4 .75 75 %
1
/5 .2 20 %
2
/5 .4 40 %
3
/5 .6 60 %
4
/5 .8 80 %
1
/6 .16 16 .6 %
5
/6 .83 83 .3 %
1
/8 .125 12.5 %
3
/8 .375 37.5 %
5
/8 .625 62.5 %
7
/8 .875 87.5 %
1
/9 .1 11. 1 %
1
/10 .1 10 %
1
/11 . 09 9. 09 %
1
/12 . 083 8 .3 %
1
/16 .0625 6.25 %
1
/20 .05 5%
1
/25 .04 4%
1
/50 .02 2%

III. PERFECT SQUARES AND PERFECT CUBES


12 = 1 22 = 4 32 = 9 42 = 16 52 = 25
2 2 2
6 = 36 7 = 49 8 = 64 92 = 81 102 = 100
112 = 121 122 = 144 132 = 169 142 = 196 152 = 225
2 2 2
16 = 256 17 = 289 18 = 324 192 = 361 202 = 400
2 2 2
21 = 441 22 = 484 23 = 529 242 = 576 252 = 625

13 = 1 23 = 8 33 = 27 43 = 64 53 = 125
63 = 216 73 = 343 83 = 512 93 = 729 103 = 1000

MATHCOUNTS Coaching Kit 41


IV. SQUARE ROOTS
1 =1 2 ≈ 1.414 3 ≈ 1.732 4 =2 5 ≈ 2.236
6 ≈ 2.449 7 ≈ 2.646 8 ≈ 2.828 9 =3 10 ≈ 3.162

V. FORMULAS

Perimeter: Volume:
Triangle p=a+b+c Cube V = s3
Square p = 4s Rectangular Prism V = lwh.
Rectangle p = 2l + 2w Cylinder V = πr2h
Circle (circumference) c = 2πr Cone V = (1/3)πr2h
c = πd Sphere V = (4/3)πr3
Pyramid V = (1/3)(area of base)h.

Area:
Rhombus A = (½)d1d2 Circle A = πr2
Square A = s2 Triangle A = (½)bh.a
Rectangle A = lw = bh Right Triangle A = (½)l1l2
Parallelogram A = bh Equilateral Triangle A = (¼) s2 3
Trapezoid A = (½)(b1 + b2)h.

Total Surface Area: Lateral Surface Area:


2
Cube T = 6s Rectangular Prism L = (2l + 2w)h
Rectangular Prism T = 2lw + 2lh + 2wh Cylinder L = 2πrh
Cylinder T = 2πr2 + 2πrh
Sphere T = 4πr2

Distance = Rate × Time


− y1 1y 6
1x 6
2
Slope of a Line with Endpoints (x1, y1) and (x2, y2): slope = m =
2 − x1
Distance Formula: distance between two points or length of segment with endpoints (x1, y1) and (x2, y2)

D= 1x 2 − x1 6 +1y
2
2 − y1 6 2

Midpoint Formula: midpoint of a line segment given two endpoints (x1, y1) and (x2, y2)
 x + x y1 + y2 
 2 
1 2
,
2
Circles:
 x  12πr 6 , where x is the measure of the central angle of the arc
Length of an arc =
 360
 x  3πr 8 , where x is the measure of the central angle of the sector
Area of a sector = 
 360
2

MATHCOUNTS Coaching Kit 42


Combinations (number of groupings when the order of the items in the groups does not matter):
N!
Number of combinations = , where N = # of total items and R = # of items being chosen
R !( N − R)!

Permutations (number of groupings when the order of the items in the groups matters):
N!
Number of permutations = , where N = # of total items and R = # of items being chosen
( N − R)!

Length of a Diagonal of a Square = s 2

Length of a Diagonal of a Cube = s 3

Length of a Diagonal of a Rectangular Solid =x 2 + y 2 + z 2 , with dimensions x, y and z


N ( N − 3)
Number of Diagonals for a Convex Polygon with N Sides =
2

Sum of the Measures of the Interior Angles of a Regular Polygon with N Sides = (N − 2)180

Heron’s Formula:
For any triangle with side lengths a, b and c, Area = s( s − a )( s − b)( s − c) , where s = ½(a + b + c)

Pythagorean Theorem: (Can be used with all right triangles)


a2 + b2 = c2 , where a and b are the lengths of the legs and c is the length of the hypotenuse

Pythagorean Triples: Integer-length sides for right triangles form Pythagorean Triples – the largest
number must be on the hypotenuse. Memorizing the bold triples will also lead to other triples that are
multiples of the original.
3 4 5 5 12 13 7 24 25
6 8 10 10 24 26 8 15 17
9 12 15 15 36 39 9 40 41

Special Right Triangles:


45o – 45o – 90o 30o – 60o – 90o
hypotenuse = 2 (leg) = a 2 hypotenuse = 2(shorter leg) = 2b
hypotenuse c
leg = = longer leg = 3 (shorter leg) = b 3
2 2
longer leg hypotenuse
shorter leg = =
45°
3 2
c
a
30°
45° a c
a

60°
b
MATHCOUNTS Coaching Kit 43
a x
Geometric Mean: = therefore, x2 = ab and x = ab
x b

360
Regular Polygon: Measure of a central angle = , where n = number of sides of the polygon
n
360
Measure of vertex angle = 180 − , where n = number of sides of the polygon
n

Ratio of Two Similar Figures: If the ratio of the measures of corresponding side lengths is A:B,
then the ratio of the perimeters is A:B, the ratio of the areas is A 2 : B 2 and the ratio of the
volumes is A 3 : B 3 .

1 61 6
Difference of Two Squares: a 2 − b 2 = a − b a + b
Example: 12 2 − 9 2 = 112 − 96112 + 96 = 3 ⋅ 21 = 63
144 − 81 = 63
Determining the Greatest Common Factor (GCF): 5 Methods
1. Prime Factorization (Factor Tree) – Collect all common factors
2. Listing all Factors
3. Multiply the two numbers and divide by the Least Common Multiple (LCM)
Example: to find the GCF of 15 and 20, multiply 15 × 20 = 300,
then divide by the LCM, 60. The GCF is 5.
4. Divide the smaller number into the larger number. If there is a remainder, divide the
remainder into the divisor until there is no remainder left. The last divisor used is the GCF.
Example: 180 385 25 180 5 25
360 175 25 5 is the GCF of 180 and 385
25 5 0

5. Single Method for finding both the GCF and LCM


Put both numbers in a lattice. On the left, put ANY divisor of the two numbers and put the
quotients below the original numbers. Repeat until the quotients have no common factors
except 1 (relatively prime). Draw a “boot” around the left-most column and the bottom
row. Multiply the vertical divisors to get the GCF. Multiply the “boot” numbers (vertical
divisors and last-row quotients) to get the LCM.

40 140 40 140 40 140 The GCF is 2×10 = 20


2 20 70 2 20 70 2 20 70 The LCM is
10 10 2 7 2×10×2×7 = 280

VI. DEFINITIONS

Real Numbers: all rational and irrational numbers

Rational Numbers: numbers that can be written as a ratio of two integers

Irrational Numbers: non-repeating, non-terminating decimals; can’t be written as a ratio of two integers
(i.e. 7 , π )

MATHCOUNTS Coaching Kit 44


Integers: {…, -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, …}

Whole Numbers: {0, 1, 2, 3, …}

Natural Numbers: {1, 2, 3, 4, …}

Common Fraction: a fraction in lowest terms (Refer to “Forms of Answers” in the MATHCOUNTS
School Handbook for a complete definition.)

Equation of a Line:
A
Standard form: Ax + By = C with slope = −
B
Slope-intercept form: y = mx + b with slope = m and y-intercept = b

Regular Polygon: a convex polygon with all equal sides and all equal angles

1 1
Negative Exponents: x − n = and −n
= xn
xn x

Systems of Equations: x + y = 10 8 + y = 10 (8, 2) is the solution


x−y = 6 y = 2 of the system
2 x = 16
x = 8

Mean = Arithmetic Mean = Average

Mode = the number(s) occurring the most often; there may be more than one

Median = the middle number when written from least to greatest


If there is an even number of terms, the median is the average of the two middle terms.

Range = the difference between the greatest and least values

Measurements:
1 mile = 5280 feet
1 square foot = 144 square inches
1 square yard = 9 square feet
1 cubic yard = 27 cubic feet

VII. PATTERNS
Divisibility Rules:
Number is divisible by 2: last digit is 0,2,4,6 or 8
3: sum of digits is divisible by 3
4: two-digit number formed by the last two digits is divisible by 4
5: last digit is 0 or 5
6: number is divisible by both 2 and 3
8: three-digit number formed by the last 3 digits is divisible by 8
9: sum of digits is divisible by 9
10: last digit is 0
MATHCOUNTS Coaching Kit 45
Sum of the First N Odd Natural Numbers = N 2
Sum of the First N Even Natural Numbers = N 2 + N = N(N + 1)
N
Sum of an Arithmetic Sequence of Integers: × (first term + last term), where N = amount of
2
numbers/terms in the sequence

Find the digit in the units place of a particular power of a particular integer
Find the pattern of units digits: 71 ends in 7
72 ends in 9
(pattern repeats 73 ends in 3
every 4 exponents) 74 ends in 1
75 ends in 7
Divide 4 into the given exponent and compare the remainder with the first four exponents.
(a remainder of 0 matches with the exponent of 4)
Example: What is the units digit of 722?
22 ÷ 4 = 5 r. 2, so the units digit of 722 is the same as the units digit of 72, which is 9.

VIII. FACTORIALS (“n!” is read “n factorial”)


n! = (n)×(n −1)×(n − 2)×…×(2)×(1) Example: 5! = 5 × 4 × 3 × 2 × 1 = 120
0! = 1
1! = 1
2! = 2 Notice 6! 6 × 5 × 4 × 3 × 2 ×1
= = 30
3! = 6 4! 4 × 3 × 2 ×1
4! = 24
5! = 120
6! = 720
7! = 5040

IX. PASCAL’S TRIANGLE


Pascal’s Triangle Used for Probability:
Remember that the first row is row zero (0). Row 4 is 1 4 6 4 1. This can be used to
determine the different outcomes when flipping four coins.
1 4 6 4 1
way to get ways to get ways to get ways to get way to get
4 heads 0 tails 3 heads 1 tail 2 heads 2 tails 1 head 3 tails 0 heads 4 tails

For the Expansion of (a + b)n , use numbers in Pascal’s Triangle as coefficients.


1 (a + b)0 = 1
1 1 (a + b)1 = a + b
1 2 1 (a + b)2 = a2 + 2ab + b2
1 3 3 1 (a + b)3 = a3 + 3a2b + 3ab2 + b3
1 4 6 4 1 (a + b)4 = a4 + 4a3b + 6a2b2 + 4ab3 + b4
1 5 10 10 5 1 (a + b)5 = a5 + 5a4b + 10a3b2 + 10a2b3 + 5ab4 + b5

MATHCOUNTS Coaching Kit 46


For 2n, add all the numbers in the nth row. (Remember the triangle starts with row 0.)
1 20 = 1
1 1 21 = 1 + 1 = 2
1 2 1 22 = 1 + 2 + 1 = 4
1 3 3 1 23 = 1 + 3 + 3 + 1 = 8
1 4 6 4 1 24 = 1 + 4 + 6 + 4 + 1 = 16
1 5 10 10 5 1 25 = 1 + 5 + 10 + 10 + 5 + 1 = 32

X. SQUARING A NUMBER WITH A UNITS DIGIT OF 5

(n5)2 = n × (n + 1) 2 5 , where n represents the block of digits before the units digit of 5
Examples:
(35)2 = 3×(3+1) 2 5 (125)2 = 12×(12+1) 2 5
= 3×(4) 2 5 = 12×(13) 2 5
=1225 =15625
= 1,225 = 15,625

XI. BASES
%DVH GHFLPDO²RQO\XVHVGLJLWV²
Base 2 = binary – only uses digits 0 – 1
%DVH RFWDO²RQO\XVHVGLJLWV²
Base 16 = hexadecimal – only uses digits 0 – 9, A – F (where A=10, B=11, …, F=15)

Changing from Base 10 to Another Base:


What is the base 2 representation of 125 (or “125 base 10” or “12510”)?
We know 125 = 1(102) + 2(101) + 5(100) = 100 + 20 + 5, but what is it equal to in base 2?
12510 = ?(2n) + ?(2n-1) + … + ?(20)
The largest power of 2 in 125 is 64 = 26, so we now know our base 2 number will be:
?(26) + ?(25) + ?(24) + ?(23) + ?(22) + ?(21)+ ?(20) and it will have 7 digits of 1’s and/or 0’s.

Since there is one 64, we have: 1(26) + ?(25) + ?(24) + ?(23) + ?(22) + ?(21)+ ?(20)
We now have 125 – 64 = 61 left over, which is one 32 = 25 and 29 left over, so we have:
1(26) + 1(25) + ?(24) + ?(23) + ?(22) + ?(21)+ ?(20)
In the left-over 29, there is one 16 = 24, with 13 left over, so we have:
1(26) + 1(25) + 1 (24) + ?(23) + ?(22) + ?(21)+ ?(20)
In the left-over 13, there is one 8 = 23, with 5 left over, so we have:
1(26) + 1(25) + 1(24) + 1(23) + ?(22) + ?(21)+ ?(20)
In the left-over 5, there is one 4 = 22, with 1 left over, so we have:
1(26) + 1(25) + 1(24) + 1(23) + 1(22) + ?(21)+ ?(20)
In the left-over 1, there is no 2 = 21, so we still have 1 left over, and our expression is:
1(26) + 1(25) + 1(24) + 1(23) + 1(22) + 0(21)+ ?(20)
The left-over 1 is one 20, so we finally have:
1(26) + 1(25) + 1(24) + 1(23) + 1(22) + 0(21)+ 1(20) = 11111012

MATHCOUNTS Coaching Kit 47


Now try What is the base 3 representation of 105?
The largest power of 3 in 105 is 81 = 34, so we now know our base 3 number will be:
?(34) + ?(33) + ?(32) + ?(31)+ ?(30) and will have 5 digits of 2’s, 1’s, and/or 0’s.
Since there is one 81, we have: 1(34) + ?(33) + ?(32) + ?(31)+ ?(30)
In the left-over 105 – 81 = 24, there is no 27 = 33, so we still have 24 and the expression:
1(34) + 0(33) + ?(32) + ?(31)+ ?(30)
In the left-over 24, there are two 9’s (or 32’s), with 6 left over, so we have:
1(34) + 0(33) + 2(32) + ?(31)+ ?(30)
In the left-over 6, there are two 3’s (or 31’s), with 0 left over, so we have:
1(34) + 0(33) + 2(32) + 2(31)+ ?(30)
Since there is nothing left over, we have no 1’s (or 30’s), so our final expression is:
1(34) + 0(33) + 2(32) + 2(31)+ 0(30) = 102203

The following is another fun algorithm for converting base 10 numbers to other bases:

12510 = ?2 10510 = ?3 12510 = ?16

1 r.1 1 r.0 7 r.13(D)


2 3 r.1 3 3 r.2 16 125
2 7 r.1 3 11 r.2
2 15 r.1 3 35 r.0 12510 = 7D16
2 31 r.0 3 105
2 62 r.1
Start
here 2 125 10510 = 102203

12510 = 11111012 xyzn = (x × n2) + (y × n1) + (z × n0)

Notice: Everything in bold shows the first division operation. The first remainder will be the last digit
in the base n representation, and the quotient is then divided again by the desired base. The process is
repeated until a quotient is reached that is less than the desired base. At that time, the final quotient
and remainders are read downward.

XII. FACTORS
Determining the Number of Factors of a Number: First find the prime factorization (include the 1 if a
factor is to the first power). Increase each exponent by 1 and multiply these new numbers together.
Example: How many factors does 300 have?
The prime factorization of 300 is 22 × 31 × 52 . Increase each of the exponents by 1 and multiply
these new values: (2+1) × (1+1) × (2+1) = 3 × 2 × 3 = 18. So 300 has 18 factors.

Finding the Sum of the Factors of a Number:


Example: What is the sum of the factors of 10,500?
(From the prime factorization 22 × 31 × 53 × 71, we know 10,500 has 3 × 2 × 4 × 2 = 48 factors.)
The sum of these 48 factors can be calculated from the prime factorization, too:
(20 + 21 + 22)(30 + 31)(50 + 51 + 52 + 53)(70 + 71) = 7 × 4 × 156 × 8 = 34,944.
MATHCOUNTS Coaching Kit 48

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