1969 AHSME Problems/Problem 6

Problem

The area of the ring between two concentric circles is $12\tfrac{1}{2}\pi$ square inches. The length of a chord of the larger circle tangent to the smaller circle, in inches, is:

$\text{(A) } \frac{5}{\sqrt{2}}\quad \text{(B) } 5\quad \text{(C) } 5\sqrt{2}\quad \text{(D) } 10\quad \text{(E) } 10\sqrt{2}$

Solution

[asy] draw(circle((0,0),50)); draw(circle((0,0),40)); draw((-30,40)--(30,40),dotted); draw((-30,40)--(0,0)--(0,40),dotted); draw((-5,40)--(-5,35)--(0,35)); dot((-30,40)); dot((0,40)); dot((30,40)); dot((0,0)); [/asy] Let $a$ be radius of larger circle, and $b$ be radius of smaller circle. The area of the ring can be determined by subtracting the area of the smaller circle from the area of the larger circle, so \[\pi a^2 - \pi b^2 = \frac{25 \pi}{2}\] \[a^2 - b^2 = \frac{25}{2}\] From the diagram, by using the Pythagorean Theorem, half of the chord is $\frac{5}{\sqrt{2}} = \frac{5 \sqrt{2}}{2}$ units long, so the the length of the entire chord is $\boxed{\textbf{(C) } 5 \sqrt{2}}$.


See also

1969 AHSC (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 5
Followed by
Problem 7
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