In mathematics, the mountain climbing problem is a problem of finding the conditions that two function forming profiles of a two-dimensional mountain must satisfy, so that two climbers can start on the bottom on the opposite sides of the mountain and coordinate their movements to reach to the top while always staying at the same height. This problem was named and posed in this form by James V. Whittaker in 1966, but its history goes back to Tatsuo Homma, who solved a version of it in 1952.
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