Difference between revisions of "2019 AMC 12B Problems/Problem 25"
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==Solution 3 (Complex Numbers)== | ==Solution 3 (Complex Numbers)== | ||
− | Let <math>A</math>, <math>B</math>, <math>C</math>, and <math>D</math> correspond to the complex numbers <math>a</math>, <math>b</math>, <math>c</math>, and <math>d</math>. Then, the complex representations of the centroids are <math>(a+b+c)/3</math>, <math>(b+c+d)/3</math>, and <math>(a+c+d)/3</math>. The pairwise distances between the centroids are <math>\lvert (d-a)/3 \rvert</math>, <math>\lvert (b-a)/3 \rvert</math>, and <math>\lvert (b-d)/3 \rvert</math>, all equal. Thus, <math>\lvert (b-a)/3 \rvert=\lvert (d-a)/3 \rvert=\lvert (b-d)/3 \rvert</math>, so <math>\lvert (b-a) \rvert=\lvert (d-a) \rvert=\lvert (b-d) \rvert</math>. Hence, <math>\triangle DBA</math> is equilateral. | + | Let <math>A</math>, <math>B</math>, <math>C</math>, and <math>D</math> correspond to the complex numbers <math>a</math>, <math>b</math>, <math>c</math>, and <math>d</math>, respectively. Then, the complex representations of the centroids are <math>(a+b+c)/3</math>, <math>(b+c+d)/3</math>, and <math>(a+c+d)/3</math>. The pairwise distances between the centroids are <math>\lvert (d-a)/3 \rvert</math>, <math>\lvert (b-a)/3 \rvert</math>, and <math>\lvert (b-d)/3 \rvert</math>, all equal. Thus, <math>\lvert (b-a)/3 \rvert=\lvert (d-a)/3 \rvert=\lvert (b-d)/3 \rvert</math>, so <math>\lvert (b-a) \rvert=\lvert (d-a) \rvert=\lvert (b-d) \rvert</math>. Hence, <math>\triangle DBA</math> is equilateral. |
By the Law of Cosines, | By the Law of Cosines, | ||
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<math>[ABCD]=10\sqrt{3}+6(\sin{\angle BCD}-\sqrt{3}\cos(\angle BCD))=10\sqrt{3}+6(\sin(180^{\circ} -\angle BCD)-\sqrt{3}\cos(180^{\circ} - \angle BCD))</math> | <math>[ABCD]=10\sqrt{3}+6(\sin{\angle BCD}-\sqrt{3}\cos(\angle BCD))=10\sqrt{3}+6(\sin(180^{\circ} -\angle BCD)-\sqrt{3}\cos(180^{\circ} - \angle BCD))</math> | ||
− | <math>= 10\sqrt{3}+12\sin(120^{\circ}-\angle BCD) \ | + | <math>= 10\sqrt{3}+12\sin(120^{\circ}-\angle BCD) \le 12 + 10\sqrt{3}</math>. Thus, the maximum possible area of <math>ABCD</math> is <math>\boxed{\textbf{(C) }12 + 10\sqrt{3}}</math>. |
~ Leo.Euler | ~ Leo.Euler |
Revision as of 10:18, 20 August 2021
Problem
Let be a convex quadrilateral with and Suppose that the centroids of and form the vertices of an equilateral triangle. What is the maximum possible value of the area of ?
Solution 1 (vectors)
Place an origin at , and assign position vectors of and . Since is not parallel to , vectors and are linearly independent, so we can write for some constants and . Now, recall that the centroid of a triangle has position vector .
Thus the centroid of is ; the centroid of is ; and the centroid of is .
Hence , , and . For to be equilateral, we need . Further, . Hence we have , so is equilateral.
Now let the side length of be , and let . By the Law of Cosines in , we have . Since is equilateral, its area is , while the area of is . Thus the total area of is , where in the last step we used the subtraction formula for . Alternatively, we can use calculus to find the local maximum. Observe that has maximum value when e.g. , which is a valid configuration, so the maximum area is .
Solution 2
Let , , be the centroids of , , and respectively, and let be the midpoint of . , , and are collinear due to well-known properties of the centroid. Likewise, , , and are collinear as well. Because (as is also well-known) and , we have . This implies that is parallel to , and in terms of lengths, . (SAS Similarity)
We can apply the same argument to the pair of triangles and , concluding that is parallel to and . Because (due to the triangle being equilateral), , and the pair of parallel lines preserve the angle, meaning . Therefore is equilateral.
At this point, we can finish as in Solution 1, or, to avoid using trigonometry, we can continue as follows:
Let , where due to the Triangle Inequality in . By breaking the quadrilateral into and , we can create an expression for the area of . We use the formula for the area of an equilateral triangle given its side length to find the area of and Heron's formula to find the area of .
After simplifying,
Substituting , the expression becomes
We can ignore the for now and focus on .
By the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality,
The RHS simplifies to , meaning the maximum value of is .
Thus the maximum possible area of is .
Solution 3 (Complex Numbers)
Let , , , and correspond to the complex numbers , , , and , respectively. Then, the complex representations of the centroids are , , and . The pairwise distances between the centroids are , , and , all equal. Thus, , so . Hence, is equilateral.
By the Law of Cosines, .
. Thus, the maximum possible area of is .
~ Leo.Euler
See Also
2019 AMC 12B (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | |
Preceded by Problem 24 |
Followed by Last Problem |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 • 16 • 17 • 18 • 19 • 20 • 21 • 22 • 23 • 24 • 25 | |
All AMC 12 Problems and Solutions |
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