Difference between revisions of "2001 AIME I Problems/Problem 12"

(Found another solution that involved splitting into tetrahedrons)
m (fixed typo)
Line 38: Line 38:
  
 
==Solution 2==
 
==Solution 2==
Notice that we can split the tetahedron into <math>4</math> smaller tetrahedrons such that the height of each tetrahedron is <math>r</math> and the base of each tetrahedron is one of the faces of the original tetrahedron. This is because the bases of the spheres are tangent to the sphere, so the line from the center to the foot of the perpendicular to the bases hits the tangency points. Letting volume be <math>V</math> and surface area be <math>F</math>, using the volume formula for each pyramid(base time height divided by 3) we have <math>\dfrac{rF}{3}=V</math>. The surface area of the pyramid is <math>\dfrac{6\cdot{4}+6\cdot{2}+4\cdot{2}}{2}+[BCD]=22</math>. We know triangle BCD's side lengths, <math>\sqrt{2^{2}+4^{2}}, \sqrt{2^{2}+6^{2}},</math> and <math>\sqrt{4^{2}+6^{2}}</math>, so using the expanded form of heron's formula, <math>[BCD]=\sqrt{\dfrac{2(a^{2}b^{2}+b^{2}c^{2}+a^{2}c^{2})-a^{4}-b^{4}-c^{4}}{16}}=\sqrt{2(5\cdot{13}+10\cdot{5}+13\cdot{10})-5^{2}-10^{2}-13^{2}}=\sqrt{196}=14</math>. Therefore, the surface area is <math>14+22=36</math>, and the volume is <math>\dfrac{[BCD]\cdot{6}}{3}=\dfrac{4\cdot{2}\cdot{6}}{3\cdot{2}}=8</math>, and using the formula above that <math>\dfrac{rF}{3}=V</math>, we have <math>12r=8</math> and thus <math>r=\dfrac{2}{3}</math>, so the desired answer is <math>2+3=\boxed{005}</math>.
+
Notice that we can split the tetahedron into <math>4</math> smaller tetrahedrons such that the height of each tetrahedron is <math>r</math> and the base of each tetrahedron is one of the faces of the original tetrahedron. This is because the bases of the spheres are tangent to the sphere, so the line from the center to the foot of the perpendicular to the bases hits the tangency points. Letting volume be <math>V</math> and surface area be <math>F</math>, using the volume formula for each pyramid(base times height divided by 3) we have <math>\dfrac{rF}{3}=V</math>. The surface area of the pyramid is <math>\dfrac{6\cdot{4}+6\cdot{2}+4\cdot{2}}{2}+[BCD]=22</math>. We know triangle BCD's side lengths, <math>\sqrt{2^{2}+4^{2}}, \sqrt{2^{2}+6^{2}},</math> and <math>\sqrt{4^{2}+6^{2}}</math>, so using the expanded form of heron's formula, <math>[BCD]=\sqrt{\dfrac{2(a^{2}b^{2}+b^{2}c^{2}+a^{2}c^{2})-a^{4}-b^{4}-c^{4}}{16}}=\sqrt{2(5\cdot{13}+10\cdot{5}+13\cdot{10})-5^{2}-10^{2}-13^{2}}=\sqrt{196}=14</math>. Therefore, the surface area is <math>14+22=36</math>, and the volume is <math>\dfrac{[BCD]\cdot{6}}{3}=\dfrac{4\cdot{2}\cdot{6}}{3\cdot{2}}=8</math>, and using the formula above that <math>\dfrac{rF}{3}=V</math>, we have <math>12r=8</math> and thus <math>r=\dfrac{2}{3}</math>, so the desired answer is <math>2+3=\boxed{005}</math>.
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==

Revision as of 23:41, 30 January 2016

Problem

A sphere is inscribed in the tetrahedron whose vertices are $A = (6,0,0), B = (0,4,0), C = (0,0,2),$ and $D = (0,0,0).$ The radius of the sphere is $m/n,$ where $m$ and $n$ are relatively prime positive integers. Find $m + n.$

Solution

import three; pointpen = black; pathpen = black+linewidth(0.7); currentprojection = perspective(-2,9,4);
triple A = (6,0,0), B = (0,4,0), C = (0,0,2), D = (0,0,0);
triple E = (2/3,0,0), F = (0,2/3,0), G = (0,0,2/3), L = (0,2/3,2/3), M = (2/3,0,2/3), N = (2/3,2/3,0);
triple I = (2/3,2/3,2/3);
triple J = (6/7,20/21,26/21);
draw(C--A--D--C--B--D--B--A--C)
draw(L--F--N--E--M--G--L--I--M--I--N--I--J);
label("$I$",I,W);
label("$A$",A,S);
label("$B$",B,S);
label("$C$",C,W*-1);
label("$D$",D,W*-1); (Error making remote request. Unknown error_msg)

The center $I$ of the insphere must be located at $(r,r,r)$ where $r$ is the sphere's radius. $I$ must also be a distance $r$ from the plane $ABC$

The signed distance between a plane and a point $I$ can be calculated as $\frac{(I-G) \cdot P}{|P|}$, where G is any point on the plane, and P is a vector perpendicular to ABC.

A vector $P$ perpendicular to plane $ABC$ can be found as $V=(A-C)\times(B-C)=\langle 8, 12, 24 \rangle$

Thus $\frac{(I-C) \cdot P}{|P|}=-r$ where the negative comes from the fact that we want $I$ to be in the opposite direction of $P$

\begin{align*}\frac{(I-C) \cdot P}{|P|}&=-r\\ \frac{(\langle r, r, r \rangle-\langle 0, 0, 2 \rangle) \cdot P}{|P|}&=-r\\ \frac{\langle r, r, r-2 \rangle \cdot \langle 8, 12, 24 \rangle}{\langle 8, 12, 24 \rangle}&=-r\\ \frac{44r -48}{28}&=-r\\ 44r-48&=-28r\\ 72r&=48\\ r&=\frac{2}{3} \end{align*}


Finally $2+3=\boxed{005}$

Solution 2

Notice that we can split the tetahedron into $4$ smaller tetrahedrons such that the height of each tetrahedron is $r$ and the base of each tetrahedron is one of the faces of the original tetrahedron. This is because the bases of the spheres are tangent to the sphere, so the line from the center to the foot of the perpendicular to the bases hits the tangency points. Letting volume be $V$ and surface area be $F$, using the volume formula for each pyramid(base times height divided by 3) we have $\dfrac{rF}{3}=V$. The surface area of the pyramid is $\dfrac{6\cdot{4}+6\cdot{2}+4\cdot{2}}{2}+[BCD]=22$. We know triangle BCD's side lengths, $\sqrt{2^{2}+4^{2}}, \sqrt{2^{2}+6^{2}},$ and $\sqrt{4^{2}+6^{2}}$, so using the expanded form of heron's formula, $[BCD]=\sqrt{\dfrac{2(a^{2}b^{2}+b^{2}c^{2}+a^{2}c^{2})-a^{4}-b^{4}-c^{4}}{16}}=\sqrt{2(5\cdot{13}+10\cdot{5}+13\cdot{10})-5^{2}-10^{2}-13^{2}}=\sqrt{196}=14$. Therefore, the surface area is $14+22=36$, and the volume is $\dfrac{[BCD]\cdot{6}}{3}=\dfrac{4\cdot{2}\cdot{6}}{3\cdot{2}}=8$, and using the formula above that $\dfrac{rF}{3}=V$, we have $12r=8$ and thus $r=\dfrac{2}{3}$, so the desired answer is $2+3=\boxed{005}$.

See also

  • <url>viewtopic.php?p=384205#384205 Discussion on AoPS</url>
2001 AIME I (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 11
Followed by
Problem 13
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
All AIME Problems and Solutions

The problems on this page are copyrighted by the Mathematical Association of America's American Mathematics Competitions. AMC logo.png