1970 IMO Problems/Problem 5
Problem
In the tetrahedron , angle
is a right angle. Suppose that the foot
of the perpendicular from
to the plane
in the tetrahedron is the intersection of the altitudes of
. Prove that
.
For what tetrahedra does equality hold?
Solution
Let us show first that angles and
are also right. Let
be the intersection of the altitudes
of
and let
meet
at
. Planes
and
are perpendicular and
is perpendicular to
the line of intersection
. Hence
is perpendicular to the plane
and hence to
. So
Also
Therefore
But
so
, so angle
. But angle
, so
is
perpendicular to the plane
, and hence angle
=
. Similarly, angle
.
Hence
.
But now we are done, because Cauchy's inequality (applied to vectors and
)
gives
.
We have equality if and only if we have equality in Cauchy's inequality, which means
Solution 2
Let
The plan of this proof is to compute in terms of
, then
compute
in terms of
, impose the condition that
to determine
, and calculate
in
terms of
. The problem will become a simple inequality in
which will be easy to prove.
Formulas for the distance from the orthocenter to the vertices are reasonably
well known, but to make this solution self contained, we compute them here.
From we have that
. From
we have
. From
we have
. It follows that
.
Similarly, we have and
.
(In the last equality we used the Law of Sines:
We want to have
at the denominator to simplify computations.)
Then .
Since . This yields
.
Using this value for we get
After some simplifications, and using again the Law of Sines, this becomes
.
What we need to prove then is that . We could
invoke the Cauchy-Schwarz Inequality like in the first solution, but we can
just as well make the computations, and notice that this is equivalent to
or
, which is always true.
We also see that we have equality if and only if .
[Solution by pf02, December 2024]
1970 IMO (Problems) • Resources | ||
Preceded by Problem 4 |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 | Followed by Problem 6 |
All IMO Problems and Solutions |