International Mathematical Olympiad

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The International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO) is an annual mathematical olympiad for high school students. It is the oldest of the international science olympiads.

The first IMO was held in Romania in 1959. Since then it has been held every year except 1980. About 90 countries send teams of up to six students plus one team leader, one deputy leader and observers. Teams are not officially recognized - all scores are given only to individual contestants. Contestants must be under the age of 20 and must not have any post-secondary school education. Subject to these conditions, an individual may participate any number of times in the IMO.

The paper consists of six problems, with each problem being worth seven points. The total score is thus 42 points. The examination is held over two consecutive days; the contestants have four-and-a-half hours to solve three problems on each day. The problems chosen are from various areas of secondary school mathematics, broadly classifiable as geometry, number theory, algebra, and combinatorics. They require no knowledge of higher mathematics, and solutions are often short and elegant. Finding them, however, requires exceptional ingenuity and mathematical ability.

Each participating country, other than the host country, may submit suggested problems to a Problem Selection Committee provided by the host country, which reduces the submitted problems to a shortlist. The team leaders arrive at the IMO a few days in advance of the contestants and form the IMO Jury which is responsible for all the formal decisions relating to the contest, starting with selecting the six problems from the shortlist. As the leaders know the problems in advance of the contestants, they are kept strictly separated from the contestants until the second examination has finished; the contestants are accompanied to the IMO by their deputy leaders (and maybe observers as well).

Each country's marks are agreed between that country's leader and deputy leader and Co-ordinators provided by the host country (the leader of the team whose country submitted the problem in the case of the marks of the host country), subject to the decisions of the Chief Coordinator and ultimately the Jury if any disputes cannot be resolved.

Contents

[edit] Selection process

Main article: IMO selection process

The selection process for the IMO varies greatly by country. In some countries, especially Eastern Asian ones, the selection process involves several difficult tests of a difficulty comparable to the IMO itself.[1] In others, such as the USA, possible participants go through as series of easier standalone competitions that gradually increase in difficulty.

[edit] Awards

The participants are ranked based on their individual scores.

  • The total number of awarded medals is as close as possible to but not more than half the total number of contestants.
  • Subsequently the cutoffs (minimum score required to receive a gold, silver or bronze medal) are chosen such that the ratio of medals awarded approximates 1:2:3.
  • Participants who don't win a medal but who score seven points on at least one problem get an honorable mention.

Special prizes may be awarded for solutions of outstanding elegance or involving good generalisations of a problem. This last happened in 2005, 1995 and 1988, but was more frequent up to the early 1980s.

The rule that at most half the contestants win a medal is sometimes broken if adhering to it causes the number of medals to deviate too much from half the number of contestants. This last happened in 2006 when the choice was to give either 188 or 253 of the 498 contestants a medal.

[edit] Current and future IMOs

[edit] Past IMOs

Sources differ about the cities hosting some of the early IMOs. This may be partly because leaders are generally housed well away from the students, and partly because after the competition the students did not always stay based in one city for the rest of the IMO. The exact dates cited may also differ, because of leaders arriving before the students, and at more recent IMOs the IMO Advisory Board arriving before the leaders.

Venue Date Web site
 1   Braşov and Bucharest, Romania   23.07 - 31.07, 1959 
 2   Sinaia, Romania   18.07 - 25.07, 1960 
 3   Veszprém, Hungary   06.07 - 16.07, 1961 
 4   České Budějovice, Czechoslovakia   07.07 - 15.07, 1962 
 5   Warsaw and Wrocław, Poland   05.07 - 13.07, 1963 
 6   Moscow, Soviet Union   30.06 - 10.07, 1964 
 7   Berlin, GDR   03.07 - 13.07, 1965 
 8   Sofia, Bulgaria   03.07 - 13.07, 1966 
 9   Cetinje, Yugoslavia   02.07 - 13.07, 1967 
 10   Moscow, Soviet Union   05.07 - 18.07, 1968 
 11   Bucharest, Romania   05.07 - 20.07, 1969 
 12   Keszthely, Hungary   08.07 - 22.07, 1970 
 13   Žilina, Czechoslovakia   10.07 - 21.07, 1971 
 14   Toruń, Poland   05.07 - 17.07, 1972 
 15   Moscow, Soviet Union   05.07 - 16.07, 1973 
 16   Erfurt and East Berlin, GDR   04.07 - 17.07, 1974 
 17   Burgas and Sofia, Bulgaria   03.07 - 16.07, 1975 
 18   Lienz, Austria   07.07 - 21.07, 1976 
 19   Belgrade, Yugoslavia   01.07 - 13.07, 1977 
 20   Bucharest, Romania   03.07 - 10.07, 1978 
 21   London, United Kingdom   30.06 - 09.07, 1979 
 22   Washington, DC, United States   08.07 - 20.07, 1981 
 23   Budapest, Hungary   05.07 - 14.07, 1982 
 24   Paris, France   01.07 - 12.07, 1983 
 25   Prague, Czechoslovakia   29.06 - 10.07, 1984 
 26   Joutsa, Finland   29.06 - 11.07, 1985 
 27   Warsaw, Poland   04.07 - 15.07, 1986 
 28   Havana, Cuba   05.07 - 16.07, 1987 
 29   Sydney and Canberra, Australia   09.07 - 21.07, 1988 
 30   Brunswick, FRG   13.07 - 24.07, 1989 
 31   Beijing, China   08.07 - 19.07, 1990 
 32   Sigtuna, Sweden   12.07 - 23.07, 1991 
 33   Moscow, Russia   10.07 - 21.07, 1992 
 34   Istanbul, Turkey   13.07 - 24.07, 1993 
 35   Hong Kong   08.07 - 20.07, 1994 
 36   Toronto, Canada   13.07 - 25.07, 1995   [1] 
 37   Mumbai, India   05.07 - 17.07, 1996   [2] 
 38   Mar del Plata, Argentina   18.07 - 31.07, 1997   [3] 
 39   Taipei, Taiwan   10.07 - 21.07, 1998   [4] 
 40   Bucharest, Romania   10.07 - 22.07, 1999   [5] 
 41   Daejeon, South Korea   13.07 - 25.07, 2000   [6] 
 42   Washington, DC, United States   01.07 - 14.07, 2001   [7] 
 43   Glasgow, United Kingdom   19.07 - 30.07, 2002 
 44   Tokyo, Japan   07.07 - 19.07, 2003   [8] 
 45   Athens, Greece   06.07 - 18.07, 2004   [9] 
 46   Mérida, Mexico   08.07 - 19.07, 2005   [10] 
 47   Ljubljana, Slovenia   06.07 - 18.07, 2006   [11] 
 48   Hanoi, Vietnam   19.07 - 31.07, 2007   [12] 

[edit] Notable past participants

Many IMO medalists went on to become distinguished Mathematicians. The following is a complete list of Fields Medal winners who also received IMO medals with corresponding years and medals received noted (G for Gold, S for Silver, and B for Bronze medal):

Name Team IMO medal(s) Fields medal Wolf Prize
Grigory Margulis Soviet Union S 1962 1978 2005
Vladimir Drinfel'd Soviet Union G 1969 1990
Jean-Christophe Yoccoz France G 1974 1994
Richard Borcherds United Kingdom G 1978, S 1977 1998
Timothy Gowers United Kingdom G 1981 1998
Grigori Perelman Soviet Union G 1982 2006
Laurent Lafforgue France S 1985, S 1984 2002
Terence Tao Australia G 1988, S 1987, B 1986 2006

In addition, many IMO medalists have become famous Computer Scientists. The following is a list of people who have won the Nevanlinna Prize, the Knuth Prize, or the Gödel Prize:

Name Team IMO medal(s) Nevanlinna Prize Knuth Prize Gödel Prize
László Lovász Hungary G 1966, G 1965, G 1964, S 1963 1999 2001
László Babai Hungary G 1968, S 1967, B 1966 1993
Peter Shor U.S.A. S 1977 1998 1999
Johan Håstad Sweden G 1977 1994
Alexander Razborov Soviet Union G 1979 1990 2007

[edit] Notable achievements

  • Bulgaria is one of the strongest mathematics (educationally/competitively) oriented coutries in the world[citation needed] and indeed it is the nation with the smallest population to have won the International Mathematics Competition[citation needed], beating the likes of China and the USA[citation needed], each respectively having populations that are 187 and 40 times bigger than its comparatively small population of 7.5 million. It is also a world leader in terms of having the most mathematics olympiad gold medal winners per capita[citation needed] and is one of only four countries (USA, China, Russia and Bulgaria) to have won the Mathematics Olympics by having all of its team members finish with gold medals[citation needed] (in 2003[2]).
  • Reid Barton (USA) was the first participant to win a Gold medal four times (1998-1999-2000-2001). Barton is also one of only seven four-time Putnam Fellow (2001-2002-2003-2004). In addition, he is the only person to have won both the IMO and the International Olympiad in Informatics (IOI).
  • Christian Reiher (Germany) is the only other participant to have won four Gold medals (2000-2001-2002-2003); Reiher also received a Bronze medal (1999).
  • Wolfgang Burmeister (GDR), Martin Harterich (FRG) and Iurie Boreico (Moldova) are the only other participants besides Reiher to win five Medals with at least three of them Gold.
  • Ciprian Manolescu (Romania) managed to write a perfect paper (42 points) for Gold medal more times than anybody else in history of competition. He did it all three times he participated in IMO (1995-1996-1997). Manolescu is also a three-time Putnam Fellow (1997-1998-2000).
  • Eugenia Malinnikova (USSR) is the best female contestant in IMO history. She has 3 gold medals in IMO 1989 (41 points), IMO 1990 (42) and IMO 1991 (42), missing only 1 point in 1989 to precede Manolescu's achievement.
  • Terence Tao (Australia) participated in IMO 1986, 1987 and 1988, winning Bronze, Silver and Gold medals respectively. He won a Gold medal at the age of thirteen in IMO 1988, becoming the youngest person to receive a Gold medal. He received a Fields medal in 2006.
  • Oleg Golberg (Russia/USA) is the only participant in IMO history to win Gold medals for different countries: he won two for Russia in 2002 and 2003, then one for USA in 2004.
  • Team USA won IMO 1994 in unique style when all six members of the team wrote a perfect paper and thus received six Gold medals. This accomplishment has never been repeated and earned a mention in TIME Magazine.
  • Other teams that won IMO and had all members receive Gold medals are China 8 times (1992-1993-1997-2000-2001-2002-2004-2006) and Russia (2002) and Bulgaria (2003) once.
  • Team Hungary won IMO 1975 in completely opposite and totally unorthodox way when none of the eight team members received a Gold medal (5 Silver, 3 Bronze). Second place team GDR also did not have a single Gold medal winner (4 Silver, 4 Bronze).

[edit] Multiple IMO winners

The following table lists all IMO Winners who have won at least three Gold Medals, with corresponding years and non-Gold Medals received noted (S for Silver medal, B for Bronze medal).

NameTeam(s)Years
 Christian Reiher  Germany  2000  2001  2002  2003  1999 B 
 Reid Barton  United States  1998  1999  2000  2001 
 Wolfgang Burmeister  GDR  1968  1970  1971  1967 S  1969 S 
 Iurie Boreico  Moldova  2004  2005  2006  2003 S  2007 S 
 Martin Harterich  FRG  1986  1987  1989  1988 S  1985 B 
 László Lovász  Hungary  1964  1965  1966  1963 S 
 József Pelikán  Hungary  1964  1965  1966  1963 S 
 Nikolai Nikolov  Bulgaria  1992  1993  1995  1994 S 
 Kentaro Nagao  Japan  1998  1999  2000  1997 S 
 Vladimir Barzov  Bulgaria  2000  2001  2002  1999 S 
 Peter Scholze  Germany  2005  2006  2007  2004 S 
 Simon Norton  United Kingdom  1967  1968  1969 
 John Rickard  United Kingdom  1975  1976  1977 
 Sergey Ivanov  Soviet Union  1987  1988  1989 
 Theodor Banica  Romania  1989  1990  1991 
 Eugenia Malinnikova  Soviet Union  1989  1990  1991 
 Serguei Norine  Russia  1994  1995  1996 
 Yuly Sannikov  Ukraine  1994  1995  1996 
 Ciprian Manolescu  Romania  1995  1996  1997 
 Ivan Ivanov  Bulgaria  1996  1997  1998 
 Nikolai Dourov  Russia  1996  1997  1998 
 Tamás Terpai  Hungary  1997  1998  1999 
 Stefan Hornet  Romania  1997  1998  1999 
 Vladimir Dremov  Russia  1998  1999  2000 
 Mihai Manea  Romania  1999  2000  2001 
 Tiankai Liu  United States  2001  2002  2004 
 Oleg Golberg  Russia '02, '03 
 United States '04 
 2002  2003  2004 
 Béla András Rácz  Hungary  2002  2003  2004 
 Andrey Badzyan  Russia  2002  2003  2004 
 Rosen Kralev  Bulgaria  2003  2004  2005 

[edit] Sources

  • Steve Olson. Count Down. Houghton Mifflin, 2004. ISBN 0-618-25141-3. Describes the IMO (based on IMO 2000) from the viewpoint of the contestants, with general background information on various related issues (such as competitiveness).
  • Tom Verhoeff. The 43rd International Mathematical Olympiad: A Reflective Report on IMO 2002. Computing Science Report 02-11, Faculty of Mathematics and Computing Science, Eindhoven University of Technology. August 2002. PDF Describes the IMO (based on IMO 2002) from the viewpoint of the leaders, with a comparison to the International Olympiad in Informatics.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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