Difference between revisions of "2016 AIME II Problems/Problem 14"
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==Solution 8 (Law of Cosines)== | ==Solution 8 (Law of Cosines)== | ||
− | Let Z be the center of <math>\triangle ABC</math>. Let <math>A’</math> be the midpoint of <math>BC</math>. <math>P</math>, <math>Z</math>, and <math>Q</math> are colinear. Let <math>ZA’ = c = 100\sqrt{3} and < | + | Let Z be the center of <math>\triangle ABC</math>. Let <math>A’</math> be the midpoint of <math>BC</math>. <math>P</math>, <math>Z</math>, and <math>Q</math> are colinear. Let <math>ZA’ = c = 100\sqrt{3}</math> and <math>ZA = 2c = 200\sqrt{3}</math>. |
+ | |||
+ | {incomplete; will finish soon} ~numerophile | ||
== See also == | == See also == |
Revision as of 00:56, 6 February 2023
Contents
Problem
Equilateral has side length
. Points
and
lie outside the plane of
and are on opposite sides of the plane. Furthermore,
, and
, and the planes of
and
form a
dihedral angle (the angle between the two planes). There is a point
whose distance from each of
and
is
. Find
.
Solution 1
The inradius of is
and the circumradius is
. Now, consider the line perpendicular to plane
through the circumcenter of
. Note that
must lie on that line to be equidistant from each of the triangle's vertices. Also, note that since
are collinear, and
, we must have
is the midpoint of
. Now, Let
be the circumcenter of
, and
be the foot of the altitude from
to
. We must have
. Setting
and
, assuming WLOG
, we must have
. Therefore, we must have
. Also, we must have
by the Pythagorean theorem, so we have
, so substituting into the other equation we have
, or
. Since we want
, the desired answer is
.
Short Simple Solution
Draw a good diagram. Draw as an altitude of the triangle. Scale everything down by a factor of
, so that
. Finally, call the center of the triangle U. Draw a cross-section of the triangle via line
, which of course includes
. From there, we can call
. There are two crucial equations we can thus generate. WLOG set
, then we call
. First equation: using the Pythagorean Theorem on
,
. Next, using the tangent addition formula on angles
we see that after simplifying
in the numerator, so
. Multiply back the scalar and you get
. Not that hard, was it?
Solution 3
To make numbers more feasible, we'll scale everything down by a factor of so that
. We should also note that
and
must lie on the line that is perpendicular to the plane of
and also passes through the circumcenter of
(due to
and
being equidistant from
,
,
), let
be the altitude from
to
. We can draw a vertical cross-section of the figure then:
We let
so
, also note that
. Because
is the centroid of
, we know that ratio of
to
is
. Since we've scaled the figure down, the length of
is
, from this it's easy to know that
and
. The following two equations arise:
Using trig identities for the tangent, we find that
Okay, now we can plug this into
to get:
Notice that
only appears in the above system of equations in the form of
, we can set
for convenience since we really only care about
. Now we have
Looking at
, it's tempting to square it to get rid of the square-root so now we have:
See the sneaky
in the above equation? That we means we can substitute it for
:
Use the quadratic formula, we find that
- the two solutions were expected because
can be
or
. We can plug this into
:
I'll use
because both values should give the same answer for
.
Wait! Before you get excited, remember that we scaled the entire figure by
?? That means that the answer is
.
-fatant
Solution 4
We use the diagram from solution 3. From basic angle chasing,
so triangle QCP is a right triangle. This means that triangles
and
are similar. If we let
and
, then we know
and
We also know that
-EZmath2006
Solution 5
We use the diagram from solution 3.
Let and
. Then, by Stewart's on
, we find
The altitude from to
is
so
Furthermore, the altitude from to
is
, so, by LoC and the dihedral condition,
Squaring the equation for and substituting
yields
Substituting into the other equation,
Squaring both of these gives
Substituting and solving for
gives
, as desired.
-mathtiger6
Solution 6 (Geometry)
Let be midpoint
be the center of equilateral
be the center of sphere
Then
(See upper diagram).
We construct the circle PQMD, use the formulas for intersecting chords and get
(See lower diagram).
We apply the Law of Sine to and get
We apply the Pythagorean Law on
and
and get
vladimir.shelomovskii@gmail.com, vvsss
Solution 7
Let be the midpoint of
and
the center of
. Then
all lie in the same vertical plane. We can make the following observations:
- The equilateral triangle has side length
, so
and
divides
so that
and
;
is the midpoint of
since
is equidistant from
– it is also the circumcenter of
;
, the dihedral angle.
To make calculations easier, we will denote , so that
and
.
Denote and
, where the tangent addition formula on
yields
Using
and
, we have
After multiplying both numerator and denominator by
we have
But note that
by power of a point at
, where we deduce by symmetry that
on the diagram below:
Thus Earlier we assigned the variable
to the length
which implies
. Thus the distance
is equal to
.
Solution 8 (Law of Cosines)
Let Z be the center of . Let
be the midpoint of
.
,
, and
are colinear. Let
and
.
{incomplete; will finish soon} ~numerophile
See also
2016 AIME II (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 13 |
Followed by Problem 15 | |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 | ||
All AIME Problems and Solutions |
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