The Art and Craft of Problem Solving

(Ann) #1

110 CHAPTER 4 THREE IMPORTANT CROSSOVER TACTICS


are the "objects" and we join vertices with edges if the corresponding objects are "re­
lated."
If you're not yet convinced, look at the following problem. Don't read the analysis
immediately.
Example 4.1.1 (USAMO 1986) During a certain lecture, each of five mathematicians
fell asleep exactly twice. For each pair of these mathematicians, there was some mo­
ment when both were sleeping simultaneously. Prove that, at some moment, some
three of them were sleeping simultaneously.
Partial Solution: Let us call the mathematicians A,B,C,D,E, and denote the
time intervals that each was asleep by Al ,A 2 ,B, ,B 2 , etc. Now define a graph whose 10
vertices are these time intervals, with vertices connected by an edge if the time intervals
overlapped. There are (�) = 10 pairs of mathematicians, I so this graph must have at
least 10 edges. Here is one example, depicting the situation where mathematician A's
first nap overlaps with C's first nap and E's second nap, etc. Notice that Al and A2
cannot be joined with a vertex, nor can B, and B 2 , etc., since each mathematician took
two distinct naps.

This particular graph contains the cycle CIAIE 2 B 2 CI. By this we mean a closed
path that "travels" along edges. A cycle is helpful, because it constrains the overlap
times. It is easiest to see this by "stacking" the intervals. Here is one possibility. Time
is measured horizontally. Notice that each nap interval must overlap with its vertical
neighbor(s).

------- cl

We will show that three different intervals must overlap. Since C, and B 2 overlap, and
CI and A l overlap, we are done if B 2 and Al overlap within CI. If they don't (as in

I Read Section 6. 1 if you don't understand the notation (;).
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