2004 AMC 10B Problems/Problem 24

Revision as of 18:49, 6 August 2024 by Rosebuddy vxd (talk | contribs) (Solution 3)

Problem

In triangle $ABC$ we have $AB=7$, $AC=8$, $BC=9$. Point $D$ is on the circumscribed circle of the triangle so that $AD$ bisects angle $BAC$. What is the value of $\frac{AD}{CD}$?

$\text{(A) } \dfrac{9}{8} \qquad \text{(B) } \dfrac{5}{3} \qquad \text{(C) } 2 \qquad \text{(D) } \dfrac{17}{7} \qquad \text{(E) } \dfrac{5}{2}$

Solution 1

Set $\overline{BD}$'s length as $x$. $\overline{CD}$'s length must also be $x$ since $\angle BAD$ and $\angle DAC$ intercept arcs of equal length (because $\angle BAD=\angle DAC$). Using Ballemy's Theorem, $7x+8x=9(AD)$. The ratio is $\frac{5}{3}\implies\boxed{\text{(B)}}$

Solution 2

[asy] import graph; import geometry; import markers;  unitsize(0.5 cm);  pair A, B, C, D, E, I;  A = (11/3,8*sqrt(5)/3); B = (0,0); C = (9,0); I = incenter(A,B,C); D = intersectionpoint(I--(I + 2*(I - A)), circumcircle(A,B,C)); E = extension(A,D,B,C);  draw(A--B--C--cycle); draw(circumcircle(A,B,C)); draw(D--A); draw(D--B); draw(D--C);  label("$A$", A, N); label("$B$", B, SW); label("$C$", C, SE); label("$D$", D, S); label("$E$", E, NE);  markangle(radius = 20,B, A, C, marker(markinterval(2,stickframe(1,2mm),true))); markangle(radius = 20,B, C, D, marker(markinterval(1,stickframe(1,2mm),true))); markangle(radius = 20,D, B, C, marker(markinterval(1,stickframe(1,2mm),true))); markangle(radius = 20,C, B, A, marker(markinterval(1,stickframe(2,2mm),true))); markangle(radius = 20,C, D, A, marker(markinterval(1,stickframe(2,2mm),true))); [/asy] Let $E = \overline{BC}\cap \overline{AD}$. Observe that $\angle ABC \cong \angle ADC$ because they both subtend arc $\overarc{AC}.$

Furthermore, $\angle BAE \cong \angle EAC$ because $\overline{AE}$ is an angle bisector, so $\triangle ABE \sim \triangle ADC$ by $\text{AA}$ similarity. Then $\dfrac{AD}{AB} = \dfrac{CD}{BE}$. By the Angle Bisector Theorem, $\dfrac{7}{BE} = \dfrac{8}{CE}$, so $\dfrac{7}{BE} = \dfrac{8}{9-BE}$. This in turn gives $BE = \frac{21}{5}$. Plugging this into the similarity proportion gives: $\dfrac{AD}{7} = \dfrac{CD}{\tfrac{21}{5}} \implies \dfrac{AD}{CD} = {\dfrac{5}{3}} = \boxed{\text{(B)}}$.

Solution 3

We know that $\overline{AD}$ bisects $\angle BAC$, so $\angle BAD = \angle CAD$. Additionally, $\angle BAD$ and $\angle BCD$ subtend the same arc, giving $\angle BAD = \angle BCD$. Similarly, $\angle CAD = \angle CBD$ and $\angle ABC = \angle ADC$.

These angle relationships tell us that $\triangle ABE\sim \triangle ADC$ by AA Similarity, so $AD/CD = AB/BE$. By the angle bisector theorem, $AB/BE = AC/CD$. Hence, \[\frac{AB}{BE} = \frac{AC}{CD} = \frac{7}{21/5} = 7\cdot\frac{5}{21} = \frac{35}{21} = \frac{5}{3}.\]

--vaporwave

P.S We get AB by the numbers given in the problem. We get EB by setting up a systems of equations. Using the Angle Bisector Theorem: 7/8=EB/EC

We also know that EB and EC add up to 9 (using the numbers given in the problem) EB+EC=9.

We then solve.

--rosebuddy_vxd

See Also

2004 AMC 10B (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 23
Followed by
Problem 25
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 10 Problems and Solutions

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