Difference between revisions of "1974 USAMO Problems/Problem 3"
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Now take the plane through EF perpendicular to AG. This creates two hemispheres, and the curve is in one and only one of them. | Now take the plane through EF perpendicular to AG. This creates two hemispheres, and the curve is in one and only one of them. | ||
− | ==See | + | ==See Also== |
{{USAMO box|year=1974|num-b=2|num-a=4}} | {{USAMO box|year=1974|num-b=2|num-a=4}} | ||
[[Category:Olympiad Geometry Problems]] | [[Category:Olympiad Geometry Problems]] |
Revision as of 13:58, 17 September 2012
Problem
Two boundary points of a ball of radius 1 are joined by a curve contained in the ball and having length less than 2. Prove that the curve is contained entirely within some hemisphere of the given ball.
Solution
Draw a Great Circle containing the two points and the curve. Then connect the two points with a chord in the circle. The circle has radius 1, so the circle has diameter 2, so the two points are all but diametrically opposite. Therefore we can draw a diameter parallel to the chord but not on it.
<geogebra>e6603728dd656bd9b9e39f2b656ced562f94332c</geogebra>
Now take the plane through EF perpendicular to AG. This creates two hemispheres, and the curve is in one and only one of them.
See Also
1974 USAMO (Problems • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 2 |
Followed by Problem 4 | |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 | ||
All USAMO Problems and Solutions |