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k a April Highlights and 2025 AoPS Online Class Information
jlacosta   0
Apr 2, 2025
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0 replies
+1 w
jlacosta
Apr 2, 2025
0 replies
An equation from the past with different coefficients
Assassino9931   12
N 10 minutes ago by ektorasmiliotis
Source: Balkan MO Shortlist 2024 N2
Let $n$ be an integer. Prove that $n^4 - 12n^2 + 144$ is not a perfect cube of an integer.
12 replies
+1 w
Assassino9931
Today at 1:00 PM
ektorasmiliotis
10 minutes ago
How can I prove boundness?
davichu   5
N 27 minutes ago by Burmf
Source: Evan Chen introduction to functional equations
Solve $f(t^2+u)=tf(t)+f(u)$ over $\mathbb{R}$

Is easy to show that f satisfies Cauchy's functional equation, but I can't find any other property to show that $f$ is linear
5 replies
davichu
2 hours ago
Burmf
27 minutes ago
all functions satisfying f(x+yf(x))+y = xy + f(x+y)
falantrng   25
N 35 minutes ago by CatinoBarbaraCombinatoric
Source: Balkan MO 2025 P3
Find all functions $f\colon \mathbb{R} \rightarrow \mathbb{R}$ such that for all $x,y \in \mathbb{R}$,
\[f(x+yf(x))+y = xy + f(x+y).\]
Proposed by Giannis Galamatis, Greece
25 replies
falantrng
Today at 11:52 AM
CatinoBarbaraCombinatoric
35 minutes ago
GJMO 2022/1: Cyclic Isosceles Pentagon
CyclicISLscelesTrapezoid   19
N an hour ago by zuat.e
Source: GJMO 2022/1
Let $ABCDE$ be a cyclic pentagon with $AB=CD$ and $BC=DE$. Let $P$ and $Q$ be points on $\overline{CB}$ and $\overline{CD}$, respectively, such that $BPQD$ is cyclic. Let $M$ be the midpoint of $\overline{BD}$. Prove that lines $CM$, $AP$, and $EQ$ concur.

Proposed by Tiger Zhang, USA
19 replies
CyclicISLscelesTrapezoid
May 15, 2022
zuat.e
an hour ago
No more topics!
All-Russian Olympiad 2010 11 grade P-6
Ovchinnikov Denis   7
N Feb 13, 2024 by math_comb01
Could the four centers of the circles inscribed into the faces of a tetrahedron be coplanar?

(vertexes of tetrahedron not coplanar)
7 replies
Ovchinnikov Denis
Sep 10, 2010
math_comb01
Feb 13, 2024
All-Russian Olympiad 2010 11 grade P-6
G H J
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Ovchinnikov Denis
470 posts
#1 • 2 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247
Could the four centers of the circles inscribed into the faces of a tetrahedron be coplanar?

(vertexes of tetrahedron not coplanar)
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mihai miculita
666 posts
#2 • 2 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247
$ \mbox{In tetrahedron }A_1A_2A_3A_4\mbox{ denote by: }a_{ij}=|A_iA_j| \mbox{ and if }\\ I_k\mbox{-is the incenter of }\triangle{A_iA_jA_h} \mbox{ for: }\{i;j;h;k\}=\{1;2;3;4\},\\ \mbox{then in barycentric coordinate we have: }\\ I_1(0;a_{34};a_{24};a_{23}); I_2(a_{34};0;a_{14};a_{13}); I_3(a_{24};a_{14};0;a_{12}); I_4(a_{23};a_{13};a_{12};0)\\ \mbox{and}\\ \mbox{The points }I_1;I_2;I_3;I_4\mbox{-is coplanar}\Leftrightarrow \left|\begin{array}{cccc} 0&a_{34}&a_{24}&a_{23}\\ a_{34}&0&a_{14}&a_{13}\\ a_{24}&a_{14}&0&a_{12}\\ a_{23}&a_{13}&a_{12}&0 \end{array}\right|=0\Leftrightarrow\\ \Leftrightarrow a_{12}^2a_{34}^2+a_{13}^2a_{24}^2+a_{14}^2a_{23}^2= 2.\left(a_{12}a_{13}a_{24}a_{34}+a_{12}a_{14}a_{23}a_{34}+a_{13}a_{14}a_{23}a_{24}\right).\ \ (1)\\ \mbox{But:}\\ \left|a_{13}a_{24}-a_{14}a_{23}\right|
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va2010
1276 posts
#3 • 1 Y
Y by Adventure10
Use $4$-dimensional barycentric coordinates on $ABCD$. Where $I_{ABC}$ denotes the incenter of $ABC$, and so on, we obtain the coordinates

\begin{align*}
I_{ABC} &= (BC : AC : AB : 0) \\
I_{ABD} &= (BD : AD : 0 : AB) \\
I_{ACD} &= (CD : 0 : AD : AC) \\
I_{BCD} &= (0 : BC : BD : CD) 
\end{align*}
Coplanarity is the condition that the above determinant is zero. This rearranges to $\operatorname{det} X = 0$, where
$X = 
\left( {\begin{array}{*{20}c}
   0 & AB & AC & BC  \\
   AB & 0 & AD & BD  \\
   AC & AD & 0 & CD \\
   BC & BD & CD & 0 \\ 
 \end{array} } \right)
$

The proof that this determinant is not zero is rather challenging. First of all, from here we see that the determinant being equal to zero is equivalent to the statement that \[ \sqrt{(AB)(CD)} + \sqrt{BC(AD)} = \sqrt{(AC)(BD)}, \]more or less (symmetry is clear). The proof that this does not occur is quite pleasant: observe that
\[ \sqrt{(AB)(CD)} + \sqrt{(BC)(AD)} \ge \sqrt{(AB + BC)(AD + CD)} > AC \]and
\[ \sqrt{(AB)(CD)} + \sqrt{(BC)(AD)} \ge \sqrt{(AB + AD)(CD + BC)} > BD \]so the result is obvious.
This post has been edited 1 time. Last edited by va2010, Aug 18, 2016, 2:54 AM
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yayups
1614 posts
#4 • 2 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247
Hmm it appears I have found a slightly simpler way to finish. The answer is $\boxed{\mathrm{no}}$. Again, use the 4D bary, and if they were coplanar, we have
\[\begin{vmatrix}0 & AB & AC & BC \\
AB & 0 & AD & BD \\
AC & AD & 0 & CD \\
BC & BD & CD & 0 \\ \end{vmatrix}=0.\]This can be expanded to
\[(AB\cdot CD-AC\cdot AB)^2 + (AB\cdot CD-AD\cdot BC^2)^2 + (AC\cdot BD-AD\cdot BC)^2 - (AB^2\cdot CD^2+AC^2\cdot BD^2 + AD^2\cdot BC^2)=0.\]Define $a=AB\cdot CD$, $b=AC\cdot BD$, and $c=AD\cdot BC$. Ptolemy's inequality tells us that $a,b,c$ satisfy pairwise triangle inequalities. Therefore, we can use the age old Ravi substitution to write $a=y+z$, $b=x+z$, $c=x+y$ for $x,y,z>0$. Thus, we have
\[(x-y)^2+(y-z)^2+(z-x)^2 = (x+y)^2 + (y+z)^2 + (z+x)^2.\]But if $p,q\ge 0$, then $|p-q|<|p+q|$, so $(p-q)^2<(p+q)^2$. Thus, the LHS of the above equation is strictly smaller than that of the RHS, so we have the desired contradiction.
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Wizard_32
1566 posts
#5 • 1 Y
Y by Adventure10
Here's yet another finish (by compressing the tetrahedron). What a nice problem!
Ovchinnikov Denis wrote:
Could the four centers of the circles inscribed into the faces of a tetrahedron be coplanar?

(vertexes of tetrahedron not coplanar)
We claim that the answer is no. To prove this, we extend barycentric coordinates to $3$ Dimension as follows:

Fix a reference tetrahedron $ABCD$ with sides $BC=a, CA=b, AC=b, DA=d, DB=e, DC=f.$ Then the coordinates of any point $P$ are defined by
$$P:=\frac{1}{[ABCD]}\Big( [PBCD],[PCDA],[PDAB],[PABC] \Big)$$where the areas are signed.

Hence, if $\mathcal{I} (\triangle)$ denotes the incenter of triangle $\triangle,$ then it is easy to get (using the areal definition):
\begin{align*}
    \mathcal{I} (ABC)=(a:b:c:0)
\end{align*}where the coordinates are un-homogenized. We get similar coordinates for the incenters of the other faces. Thus, these being coplanar is equivalent to
\begin{align*}
    \det \begin{bmatrix}
    0 & f & e & a \\
    f & 0 & d & b \\
    e & d & 0 & c \\
    a & b & c & 0 
    \end{bmatrix}=0
\end{align*}Let $u=\sqrt{ad}, v=\sqrt{be}, w=\sqrt{cf}.$
The determinant evaluates to
$$-u^4-v^4-w^4+2u^2v^2+2v^2w^2+2w^2u^2=0$$This implies
$$(u+v+w)(u+v-w)(u-v+w)(-u+v+w)=0$$Assume without loss of generality that $u=v+w.$ Squaring implies $ad=be+cf+2\sqrt{becf}>be+cf.$

Now comes the trick. Compress the tetrahedron to a quadrilateral $ACDB$ (notice the order). This order of vertices ensures that $b,c,e,f$ are the sides and $a,d$ are the diagonals. So by Ptolemy's inequality, $be+cf>ad,$ and so we have a contradiction. $\blacksquare$

Note: The compression here is not exactly a compression. What we do is create a quadrilateral with corresponsing sides and diagonals equal to the corresponding sides of the tetrahedron. Such a quadrilateral exists by the triangle inequality on all the faces.
This post has been edited 1 time. Last edited by Wizard_32, Jan 31, 2020, 10:16 AM
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Syngates
268 posts
#6 • 1 Y
Y by Adventure10
$ \mbox{In tetrahedron }A_1A_2A_3A_4\mbox{ denote by: }a_{ij}=|A_iA_j| \mbox{ and if }\\ I_k\mbox{-is the incenter of }\triangle{A_iA_jA_h} \mbox{ for: }\{i;j;h;k\}=\{1;2;3;4\},\\ \mbox{then in barycentric coordinate we have: }\\ I_1(0;a_{34};a_{24};a_{23}); I_2(a_{34};0;a_{14};a_{13}); I_3(a_{24};a_{14};0;a_{12}); I_4(a_{23};a_{13};a_{12};0)\\ \mbox{and}\\ \mbox{The points }I_1;I_2;I_3;I_4\mbox{-is coplanar}\Leftrightarrow \left|\begin{array}{cccc} 0&a_{34}&a_{24}&a_{23}\\ a_{34}&0&a_{14}&a_{13}\\ a_{24}&a_{14}&0&a_{12}\\ a_{23}&a_{13}&a_{12}&0 \end{array}\right|=0\Leftrightarrow\\ \Leftrightarrow a_{12}^2a_{34}^2+a_{13}^2a_{24}^2+a_{14}^2a_{23}^2= 2.\left(a_{12}a_{13}a_{24}a_{34}+a_{12}a_{14}a_{23}a_{34}+a_{13}a_{14}a_{23}a_{24}\right).\ \ (1)\\ \mbox{But:}\\ \left|a_{13}a_{24}-a_{14}a_{23}\right|$


I guess what he meant :-D
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algebra_star1234
2467 posts
#7
Y by
We will use 3D barycentric coordinates. The incenter of $BCD$ is $I_A = (0:CD:BD:BC)$. The incenter of $ACD$ is $I_B = (CD:0:AD:AC)$. The incenter of $ABD$ is $I_C = (BD:AD:0:AB)$. The incenter of $ABC$ is $I_D = (BC:AC:AB:0)$. The points are coplanar if
\[ \begin{vmatrix} 0 & CD & BD & BC \\ CD & 0 & AD & AC \\ BD & AD & 0 & AB \\ BC & AC & AB & 0 \end{vmatrix} = 0 \]Therefore,
\begin{align*}
(CD \cdot AB)^2 + (BD \cdot AC)^2  + (BC \cdot AD)^2 - 2(CD \cdot AB)(BD\cdot AC) - 2(CD \cdot AB)(BC \cdot AD)&\\ - 2(BD \cdot AC)(BC \cdot AD)=0 
\end{align*}Let $CD \cdot AB = x$, $BD \cdot AC = y$, and $BC \cdot AD = z$. Then, we have
\[ x^2+y^2+z^2 -2xy-2yz-2zx = 0 \]Writing this as a quadratic in $x$, we have either $x = y+z + 2\sqrt{yz}$ or $x = y+z - 2\sqrt{yz}$. In the second case, we either have $y = x+z + 2\sqrt{xz}$ or $z = x+y + 2\sqrt{xy}$. However, none of these can happen because we can show that $x+y \ge z$ and similarly for the other permutations. In fact, consider the projection of the tetrahedron onto the plane parallel to $BC$ and $AD$. Let $x'$ and $y'$ be the values of $x$ and $y$ in the projection. Note that $x \ge x'$ and $y \ge y'$. Then,
\[ x+y \ge x' + y' \ge z \]by Ptolemy's inequality. Thus, we are done.
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math_comb01
662 posts
#8
Y by
Wow, no synthetic solutions posted. Here is a one (diagrams from official):
We take 2 cases :
CASE 1: $I_AI_BI_CI_D$ is convex quadrilateral.
The idea is to introduce the midpoints of $AD,AB,CD,CB$, call them $N,M,K,L$.
https://cdn.artofproblemsolving.com/attachments/5/7/2e7810d53c9c21cf2d9a065ff5366aec203d40.png $\quad$ $\quad$ $\quad$ $\quad$ $\quad$ $\quad$ $\quad$ $\quad$ $\quad$ $\quad$ $\quad$ $\quad$ $\quad$ $\quad$ $\quad$ $\quad$ $\quad$ $\quad \quad \quad$ Draw the line $\mathbf{L}$ parallel through $B$ to $AC$, Comparing the distance of $I_D$ from $\mathbf{L}$ and $AC$ we find that $I_D$ is below the midline $LM$. So we have that $I_B,I_D$ and $I_A,I_C$ lie on opposite sides of plane and hence can't intersect contradiction.
https://cdn.artofproblemsolving.com/attachments/8/6/8d2bc2aa6ee06a220672408cbe1f7139eefbeb.png
CASE 2: It is concave
This happens when $I_A$ lies inside $I_BI_CI_D$ but however, $I_A \in  BCD$ while the other lies above contradiction!.
Done!
This post has been edited 10 times. Last edited by math_comb01, Nov 24, 2024, 4:44 PM
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