| Source | Description | Verification Note | |--------|-------------|-------------------| | ILovePDF (via Archive.org) | "Problems of the All-Soviet-Union and Russian Math Olympiads" (1989–1992, 1993–1996, 1997–2000, 2001–2004) | Archived from MIT’s old problem collection. Solutions included. | | Matholymp.com (John Scholes) | "Russian MO 1993–2021" – Detailed solutions in PDF and LaTeX | Compiled by UK IMO team coach; widely trusted in olympiad community. | | AoPS (Art of Problem Solving) | User-uploaded PDFs of Russian MO (1993–present) with solutions | Community-verified; many have official or official-equivalent solutions. | | Russian Academy of Sciences (archives) | Official PDFs for 2005–2019 (some in Russian only) | Most authoritative but language varies. Solutions in Russian. |
Evangelos Katsoulis and Titu Andreescu have published verified collections (e.g., Russian Mathematical Olympiad 1993-2002). While commercial, verified PDFs are available through institutional access (e.g., via Springer or the Isaacs Archive). These are gold-standard because they include official solution keys.
Verification level: Maximum (Professional publication). russian math olympiad problems and solutions pdf verified
The competition has several stages:
| Stage | Level | |-------|-------| | School | Grades 5–11 | | Municipal (District) | Selected winners from schools | | Regional (Oblast) | Top students from districts | | Final (National) | ~200–300 students from across Russia | not full solutions.
The final stage has two rounds, each with 4–5 problems, 4–5 hours per round.
Topics covered:
The Russian Ministry of Education has, for select years, released official PDFs in both Russian and English through publishers like MCCME (Moscow Center for Continuous Mathematical Education) .
While not exclusively Russian, this PDF contains the flavor and many problems adapted from Russian MOs. The verified version includes full inductive proofs. Search for the “Verified 1970 Elsevier Edition” PDF. for select years