Difference between revisions of "2024 AIME I Problems/Problem 14"

(Solution 1)
(Solution 1)
Line 16: Line 16:
  
 
<font size=2>Solution by Quantum-Phantom</font>
 
<font size=2>Solution by Quantum-Phantom</font>
 +
 +
 +
==Solution 2==
 +
 +
<asy>
 +
import three;
 +
 +
currentprojection = orthographic(1,1,1);
 +
 +
triple O = (0,0,0);
 +
triple A = (0,2,0);
 +
triple B = (0,0,1);
 +
triple C = (3,0,0);
 +
triple D = (3,2,1);
 +
triple E = (3,2,0);
 +
triple F = (0,2,1);
 +
triple G = (3,0,1);
 +
 +
draw(A--B--C--cycle, red);
 +
draw(A--B--D--cycle, red);
 +
draw(A--C--D--cycle, red);
 +
draw(B--C--D--cycle, red);
 +
 +
draw(E--A--O--C--cycle);
 +
draw(D--F--B--G--cycle);
 +
draw(O--B);
 +
draw(A--F);
 +
draw(E--D);
 +
draw(C--G);
 +
 +
label("$O$", O, SW);
 +
label("$A$", A, NW);
 +
label("$B$", B, W);
 +
label("$C$", C, S);
 +
label("$D$", D, NE);
 +
label("$E$", E, SE);
 +
label("$F$", F, NW);
 +
label("$G$", G, NE);
 +
</asy>
 +
 +
 +
Inscribe tetrahedron <math>ABCD</math> in an rectangular prism as shown above.
 +
 +
By the Pythagorean theorem, we note
 +
 +
<cmath>OA^2 + OB^2 = AB^2 = 41,</cmath>
 +
<cmath>OA^2 + OC^2 = AC^2 = 80, \text{and}</cmath>
 +
<cmath>OB^2 + OC^2 = BC^2 = 89.</cmath>
 +
 +
Solving yields <math>OA = 4, OB = 5,</math> and <math>OC = 8.</math>
 +
 +
Since each face of the tetrahedron is congruent, we know the point we seek is the center of the circumsphere of <math>ABCD.</math> We know all rectangular prisms can be inscribed in a circumsphere, therefore the circumsphere of the rectangular prism is also the circumsphere of <math>ABCD.</math>
 +
 +
We know that the distance from all <math>4</math> faces must be the same, so we only need to find the distance from the center to plane <math>ABC</math>.
 +
 +
Let <math>O = (0,0,0), A = (4,0,0), B = (0,5,0),</math> and <math>C = (0,0,8).</math> We obtain that the plane of <math>ABC</math> can be marked as <math>\frac{x}{4} + \frac{y}{5} + \frac{z}{8} = 1,</math> or <math>10x + 8y + 5z - 40 = 0,</math> and the center of the prism is <math>(2,\frac{5}{2},4).</math>
 +
 +
Using the Point-to-Plane distance formula, our distance is
 +
 +
<cmath>d = \frac{|10\cdot 2 + 8\cdot \frac{5}{2} + 5\cdot 4 - 40|}{\sqrt{10^2 + 8^2 + 5^2}} = \frac{20}{\sqrt{189}} = \frac{20\sqrt{21}}{63}.</cmath>
 +
 +
Our answer is <math>20 + 21 + 63 = \boxed{104}.</math>
 +
 +
- spectraldragon8
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==

Revision as of 20:05, 2 February 2024

Solution 1

Notice that $41=4^2+5^2$, $89=5^2+8^2$, and $80=8^2+4^2$, let $A~(0,0,0)$, $B~(4,5,0)$, $C~(0,5,8)$, and $D~(4,0,8)$. Then the plane $BCD$ has a normal \[\mathbf n:=\frac14\overrightarrow{BC}\times\overrightarrow{CD}=\frac14\begin{pmatrix}-4\\0\\8\end{pmatrix}\times\begin{pmatrix}4\\-5\\0\end{pmatrix}=\begin{pmatrix}10\\8\\5\end{pmatrix}.\] Hence, the distance from $A$ to plane $BCD$, or the height of the tetrahedron, is \[h:=\frac{\mathbf n\cdot\overrightarrow{AB}}{|\mathbf n|}=\frac{10\times4+8\times5+5\times0}{\sqrt{10^2+8^2+5^2}}=\frac{80\sqrt{21}}{63}.\] Each side of the tetrahedron has the same area due to congruency by "S-S-S", and we call it $S$. Then by the volume formula for cones, 13Sh=VD-ABC=VI-ABC+VI-BCD+VI-CDA+VI-DAB=13Sr4. Hence, $r=\tfrac h4=\tfrac{20\sqrt{21}}{63}$, and so the answer is $20+21+63=\boxed{104}$.

Solution by Quantum-Phantom


Solution 2

[asy] import three;  currentprojection = orthographic(1,1,1);  triple O = (0,0,0); triple A = (0,2,0); triple B = (0,0,1); triple C = (3,0,0); triple D = (3,2,1); triple E = (3,2,0); triple F = (0,2,1); triple G = (3,0,1);  draw(A--B--C--cycle, red); draw(A--B--D--cycle, red); draw(A--C--D--cycle, red); draw(B--C--D--cycle, red);  draw(E--A--O--C--cycle); draw(D--F--B--G--cycle); draw(O--B); draw(A--F); draw(E--D); draw(C--G);  label("$O$", O, SW); label("$A$", A, NW); label("$B$", B, W); label("$C$", C, S); label("$D$", D, NE); label("$E$", E, SE); label("$F$", F, NW); label("$G$", G, NE); [/asy]


Inscribe tetrahedron $ABCD$ in an rectangular prism as shown above.

By the Pythagorean theorem, we note

\[OA^2 + OB^2 = AB^2 = 41,\] \[OA^2 + OC^2 = AC^2 = 80, \text{and}\] \[OB^2 + OC^2 = BC^2 = 89.\]

Solving yields $OA = 4, OB = 5,$ and $OC = 8.$

Since each face of the tetrahedron is congruent, we know the point we seek is the center of the circumsphere of $ABCD.$ We know all rectangular prisms can be inscribed in a circumsphere, therefore the circumsphere of the rectangular prism is also the circumsphere of $ABCD.$

We know that the distance from all $4$ faces must be the same, so we only need to find the distance from the center to plane $ABC$.

Let $O = (0,0,0), A = (4,0,0), B = (0,5,0),$ and $C = (0,0,8).$ We obtain that the plane of $ABC$ can be marked as $\frac{x}{4} + \frac{y}{5} + \frac{z}{8} = 1,$ or $10x + 8y + 5z - 40 = 0,$ and the center of the prism is $(2,\frac{5}{2},4).$

Using the Point-to-Plane distance formula, our distance is

\[d = \frac{|10\cdot 2 + 8\cdot \frac{5}{2} + 5\cdot 4 - 40|}{\sqrt{10^2 + 8^2 + 5^2}} = \frac{20}{\sqrt{189}} = \frac{20\sqrt{21}}{63}.\]

Our answer is $20 + 21 + 63 = \boxed{104}.$

- spectraldragon8

See also

2024 AIME I (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 13
Followed by
Problem 15
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
All AIME Problems and Solutions

The problems on this page are copyrighted by the Mathematical Association of America's American Mathematics Competitions. AMC logo.png