Difference between revisions of "2023 AIME I Problems/Problem 13"
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~Steven Chen (Professor Chen Education Palace, www.professorchenedu.com) | ~Steven Chen (Professor Chen Education Palace, www.professorchenedu.com) | ||
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+ | ==Solution 2 (no trig)== | ||
+ | |||
+ | Let one of the vertices be at the origin and the three adjacent vertices be <math>u</math>, <math>v</math>, and <math>w</math>. For one of the parallelepipeds, the three diagonals involving the origin have length <math>\sqrt {21}</math>. Hence, <math>(u+v)\cdot (u+v)=u\cdot u+v\cdot v+2u\cdot v=21</math> and <math>(u-v)\cdot (u-v)=u\cdot u+v\cdot v-2u\cdot v=31</math>. Since all of <math>u</math>, <math>v</math>, and <math>w</math> have equal length, <math>u\cdot u=13</math>, <math>v\cdot v=13</math>, and <math>u\cdot v=-2.5</math>. Symmetrically, <math>w\cdot w=13</math>, <math>u\cdot w=-2.5</math>, and <math>v\cdot w=-2.5</math>. Hence the volume of the parallelepiped is given by <math>\sqrt{\operatorname{det}\begin{pmatrix}13&-2.5&-2.5\\-2.5&13&-2.5\\-2.5&-2.5&13\end{pmatrix}}=\sqrt{\operatorname{det}\begin{pmatrix}15.5&-15.5&0\\-2.5&13&-2.5\\0&-15.5&15.5\end{pmatrix}}=\sqrt{15.5^2\operatorname\det\begin{pmatrix}1&-1&0\\-2.5&13&-2.5\\0&-1&1\end{pmatrix}}=\sqrt{15.5^2\cdot 8}</math>. | ||
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+ | For the other parallelpiped, the three diagonals involving the origin are of length <math>\sqrt{31}</math> and the volume is <math>\sqrt{\operatorname{det}\begin{pmatrix}13&2.5&2.5\\2.5&13&2.5\\2.5&2.5&13\end{pmatrix}}=\sqrt{\operatorname{det}\begin{pmatrix}10.5&-10.5&0\\2.5&13&2.5\\0&-10.5&10.5\end{pmatrix}}=\sqrt{10.5^2\operatorname\det\begin{pmatrix}1&-1&0\\2.5&13&2.5\\0&-1&1\end{pmatrix}}=\sqrt{10.5^2\cdot 18}</math>. | ||
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+ | Consequently, the answer is <math>\sqrt\frac{10.5^2\cdot 18}{15.5^2\cdot 8}=\frac{63}{62}</math>, giving <math>\boxed{125}</math>. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ~EVIN- | ||
{{AIME box|year=2023|n=I|num-b=12|num-a=14}} | {{AIME box|year=2023|n=I|num-b=12|num-a=14}} |
Revision as of 16:09, 8 February 2023
Problem 13
Each face of two noncongruent parallelepipeds is a rhombus whose diagonals have lengths and . The ratio of the volume of the larger of the two polyhedra to the volume of the smaller is , where and are relatively prime positive integers. Find . A parallelepiped is a solid with six parallelogram faces such as the one shown below.
{insert diagram here}
Solution 1 (3-D Vector Analysis)
Denote . Denote by the length of each side of a rhombus.
Now, we put the solid to the 3-d coordinate space. We put the bottom face on the plane. For this bottom face, we put a vertex with an acute angle at the origin, denoted as . For two edges that are on the bottom face and meet at , we put one edge on the positive side of the -axis. The endpoint is denoted as . Hence, . We put the other edge in the first quadrant of the plane. The endpoint is denoted as . Hence, .
For the third edge that has one endpoint , we denote by its second endpoint. We denote . Without loss of generality, we set . Hence,
We have and
Case 1: or .
By solving (2) and (3), we get
Plugging these into (1), we get
Case 2: and , or and .
By solving (2) and (3), we get
Plugging these into (1), we get
We notice that . Thus, (4) (resp. (5)) is the parallelepiped with a larger (resp. smaller) height.
Therefore, the ratio of the volume of the larger parallelepiped to the smaller one is
Recall that . Thus, . Plugging this into the equation above, we get
Therefore, the answer is .
~Steven Chen (Professor Chen Education Palace, www.professorchenedu.com)
Solution 2 (no trig)
Let one of the vertices be at the origin and the three adjacent vertices be , , and . For one of the parallelepipeds, the three diagonals involving the origin have length . Hence, and . Since all of , , and have equal length, , , and . Symmetrically, , , and . Hence the volume of the parallelepiped is given by .
For the other parallelpiped, the three diagonals involving the origin are of length and the volume is .
Consequently, the answer is , giving .
~EVIN-
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