1999 AIME Problems/Problem 9
In the complex plane, let be the set of complex numbers
such that
Find the area of
Solution 1
Suppose we pick an arbitrary point on the complex plane, say . According to the definition of
,
this image must be equidistant to
and
. Thus the image must lie on the line with slope
and which passes through
, so its graph is
. Substituting
and
, we get
.
By the Pythagorean Theorem, we have , and the answer is
.
Solution 2
Plugging in yields
. This implies that
must fall on the line
, given the equidistant rule. By
, we get
, and plugging in
yields
. The answer is thus
.
Solution 3
We are given that is equidistant from the origin and
This translates to
Since
Because
thus
So the answer is
.
Solution 4
Let and
be the points in the complex plane represented by
and
, respectively.
implies
. Also, we are given
, so
is isosceles with base
. Notice that the base angle of this isosceles triangle is equal to the argument
of the complex number
, because
forms an angle of
with
. Drop the altitude/median from
to base
, and you end up with a right triangle that shows
. Since
and
are positive,
lies in the first quadrant and
; hence by right triangle trigonometry
. Finally,
, and
, so the answer is
.
Solution 5
Similarly to in Solution 3, we see that . Letting the point
, we have
. Expanding both sides of this equation (after squaring, of course) and canceling terms, we get
. Of course,
can't be zero because this property of the function holds for all complex
. Therefore,
and we proceed as above to get
.
~ anellipticcurveoverq
Solution 6
This is a solution that minimizes the use of complex numbers, turning this into an introductory algebra analytic geometry problem.
Consider any complex number . Let
denote point
on the complex plane. Then
on the complex plane. The equation for the line
is
.
Let the image of point be
, after the point undergoes the function. Since each image is equidistant from the preimage and the origin,
must be on the perpendicular bisector of
.Given
,
. Then
. The midpoint of
is
. Since the slopes of two respectively nonvertical and nonhorizontal lines have a product of
, using the point-slope form, the equation of the perpendicular line to
is
. Rearranging, we have
.
Since we know that , thus we plug in
into the line:
.
Let's start canceling. . Subtracting,
. Thus
. Since this is an identity for any
, thus
.
. Since
, thus
(or simply think of
as the point
, and
being the distance of
to the origin). Thus plug in
. Since
and
are relatively prime, the final result is
.
~hastapasta
See also
1999 AIME (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 8 |
Followed by Problem 10 | |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 | ||
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