2001 AMC 12 Problems/Problem 18
Problem
A circle centered at with a radius of 1 and a circle centered at with a radius of 4 are externally tangent. A third circle is tangent to the first two and to one of their common external tangents as shown. What is the radius of the third circle?
Solution
Solution 1
In the triangle we have and , thus by the Pythagorean theorem we have .
Let be the radius of the small circle, and let be the perpendicular distance from to SA=1+rSB=4+r$.
We have$ (Error compiling LaTeX. Unknown error_msg)SA = \sqrt{s^2 + (1-r)^2}SB=\sqrt{(4-s)^2 + (4-r)^2}$. Hence we get the following two equations:
<cmath> \begin{align*} s^2 + (1-r)^2 & = (1+r)^2 \\ (4-s)^2 + (4-r)^2 & = (4+r)^2 \end{align*} </cmath>
Simplifying both, we get
<cmath> \begin{align*} s^2 & = 4r \\ (4-s)^2 & = 16r \end{align*} </cmath>
As in our case both$ (Error compiling LaTeX. Unknown error_msg)rs\left( \frac{4-s}s \right)^2 = 4$.
Now there are two possibilities: either$ (Error compiling LaTeX. Unknown error_msg)\frac{4-s}s=-2\frac{4-s}s=2s<0As=\frac 434r = s^2 = \frac {16}9r = \boxed{\frac 49}$.
More generally, for two large circles of radius$ (Error compiling LaTeX. Unknown error_msg)ab\frac{ab}{(a+b)^2}$
Solution 2
The horizontal line is the equivalent of a circle of curvature , thus we can apply Descartes' Circle Formula.
The four circles have curvatures , and .
We have
Simplifying, we get
Obviously cannot equal , therefore .
Video Solution
See Also
2001 AMC 12 (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | |
Preceded by Problem 17 |
Followed by Problem 19 |
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