2014 AIME I Problems/Problem 13
Contents
Problem 13
On square , points
, and
lie on sides
and
respectively, so that
and
. Segments
and
intersect at a point
, and the areas of the quadrilaterals
and
are in the ratio
Find the area of square
.
Solution (Official Solution, MAA)
Let be the side length of
, let
, and
be the midpoints of
and
, respectively, let
be the foot of the perpendicular from
to
, let
be the foot of the perpendicular from
to
.
The fraction of the area of the square
which is occupied by trapezoid
is
so
is the center of
. Thus
,
,
are collinear, and
. Similarly, the fraction of the area occupied by trapezoid
is
, so
and
.
Because , the area of
is the sum
Rectangle
has area
. If
, then
has area
Therefore the area of
is
. Because the area of trapezoid
is
, the area of
is
.
Because these areas are in the ratio , it follows that
from which we get
. Note that
, so
and
. Then
Solution 1
Let be the side length of
, let
. Let
and
be the midpoints of
and
, respectively; because
,
is also the center of the square. Draw
through
, with
on
,
on
.
Segments
and
divide the square into four congruent quadrilaterals, each of area
. Then
The fraction of the total area occupied by parallelogram
is
, so
.
Because , with
, we get
.
Now
and because
, with
, we get
.
By Pythagoras' Theorem on
, we get
with roots
or
. The former leads to a square with diagonal less than
, which can't be, since
; therefore
and
.
Solution 2 (Fakesolve)
, a multiple of
. In addition,
, which is
.
Therefore, we suspect the square of the "hypotenuse" of a right triangle, corresponding to
and
must be a multiple of
. All of these triples are primitive:
The sides of the square can only equal the longer leg, or else the lines would have to extend outside of the square. Substituting :
Thus, is the only valid answer.
Solution 3
Continue in the same way as solution 1 to get that has area
, and
. You can then find
has length
.
Then, if we drop a perpendicular from to
at
, We get
.
Thus, , and we know
, and
. Thus, we can set up an equation in terms of
using the Pythagorean theorem.
is extraneous, so
. Since the area is
, we have it is equal to
-Alexlikemath
Video Solution
https://youtu.be/Kcug2ALOjkA?si=VoImhnX5rAKhprgk
~MathProblemSolvingSkills.com
Video Solution by Punxsutawney Phil
https://youtube.com/watch?v=wrxET2c0ZgU
See also
2014 AIME I (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 12 |
Followed by Problem 14 | |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 | ||
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