Difference between revisions of "2000 AIME II Problems/Problem 11"

m (Solution)
(Solution)
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 20: Line 20:
  
 
These yield <math>m = 1, \frac 34, -1, -\frac 43, 2, \frac 13, -3, - \frac 12</math>. Therefore, the corresponding slopes of <math>\overline{AB}</math> are <math>-1, -\frac 43, 1, \frac 34, -\frac 12, -3, \frac 13</math>, and <math>2</math>.  The sum of their absolute values is <math>\frac{119}{12}</math>. The answer is <math>m+n= \boxed{131}</math>
 
These yield <math>m = 1, \frac 34, -1, -\frac 43, 2, \frac 13, -3, - \frac 12</math>. Therefore, the corresponding slopes of <math>\overline{AB}</math> are <math>-1, -\frac 43, 1, \frac 34, -\frac 12, -3, \frac 13</math>, and <math>2</math>.  The sum of their absolute values is <math>\frac{119}{12}</math>. The answer is <math>m+n= \boxed{131}</math>
 
  
 
<br />
 
<br />
 
{{note|1}} <small>In other words, since <math>ABCD'</math> is a parallelogram, the difference between the x-coordinates and the y-coordinates of <math>C</math> and <math>D'</math> are, respectively, the difference between the x-coordinates and the y-coordinates of <math>A</math> and <math>B</math>. But since the latter are integers, then the former are integers also, so <math>C</math> has integer coordinates [[iff]] <math>D'</math> has integer coordinates.</small>
 
{{note|1}} <small>In other words, since <math>ABCD'</math> is a parallelogram, the difference between the x-coordinates and the y-coordinates of <math>C</math> and <math>D'</math> are, respectively, the difference between the x-coordinates and the y-coordinates of <math>A</math> and <math>B</math>. But since the latter are integers, then the former are integers also, so <math>C</math> has integer coordinates [[iff]] <math>D'</math> has integer coordinates.</small>
 +
 +
 +
Note: It may not seem like we considered that the coordinates of <math>B</math> have to be integers, but since the slopes of <math>\overline{AB}</math> are all rational, we can just extend <math>\overline{AB}</math> by some arbitrary amount so that <math>B</math> becomes a lattice point, which won't affect the position of <math>D'</math>. ~inaccessibles
  
 
== Solution 2 ==
 
== Solution 2 ==

Latest revision as of 11:45, 21 December 2024

Problem

The coordinates of the vertices of isosceles trapezoid $ABCD$ are all integers, with $A=(20,100)$ and $D=(21,107)$. The trapezoid has no horizontal or vertical sides, and $\overline{AB}$ and $\overline{CD}$ are the only parallel sides. The sum of the absolute values of all possible slopes for $\overline{AB}$ is $m/n$, where $m$ and $n$ are relatively prime positive integers. Find $m+n$.

Solution

For simplicity, we translate the points so that $A$ is on the origin and $D = (1,7)$. Suppose $B$ has integer coordinates; then $\overrightarrow{AB}$ is a vector with integer parameters (vector knowledge is not necessary for this solution). We construct the perpendicular from $A$ to $\overline{CD}$, and let $D' = (a,b)$ be the reflection of $D$ across that perpendicular. Then $ABCD'$ is a parallelogram, and $\overrightarrow{AB} = \overrightarrow{D'C}$. Thus, for $C$ to have integer coordinates, it suffices to let $D'$ have integer coordinates.[1]

[asy] pathpen = linewidth(0.7); pair A=(0,0), D=(1,7), Da = MP("D'",D((-7,1)),N), B=(-8,-6), C=B+Da, F=foot(A,C,D); D(MP("A",A)--MP("B",B)--MP("C",C,N)--MP("D",D,N)--cycle); D(F--A--Da,linetype("4 4"));  [/asy]

Let the slope of the perpendicular be $m$. Then the midpoint of $\overline{DD'}$ lies on the line $y=mx$, so $\frac{b+7}{2} = m \cdot \frac{a+1}{2}$. Also, $AD = AD'$ implies that $a^2 + b^2 = 1^2 + 7^2 = 50$. Combining these two equations yields

\[a^2 + \left(7 - (a+1)m\right)^2 = 50\]

Since $a$ is an integer, then $7-(a+1)m$ must be an integer. There are $12$ pairs of integers whose squares sum up to $50,$ namely $( \pm 1, \pm 7), (\pm 7, \pm 1), (\pm 5, \pm 5)$. We exclude the cases $(\pm 1, \pm 7)$ because they lead to degenerate parallelograms (rectangle, line segment, vertical and horizontal sides). Thus we have

\[7 - 8m = \pm 1, \quad 7 + 6m = \pm 1, \quad 7 - 6m = \pm 5, 7 + 4m = \pm 5\]

These yield $m = 1, \frac 34, -1, -\frac 43, 2, \frac 13, -3, - \frac 12$. Therefore, the corresponding slopes of $\overline{AB}$ are $-1, -\frac 43, 1, \frac 34, -\frac 12, -3, \frac 13$, and $2$. The sum of their absolute values is $\frac{119}{12}$. The answer is $m+n= \boxed{131}$


^ In other words, since $ABCD'$ is a parallelogram, the difference between the x-coordinates and the y-coordinates of $C$ and $D'$ are, respectively, the difference between the x-coordinates and the y-coordinates of $A$ and $B$. But since the latter are integers, then the former are integers also, so $C$ has integer coordinates iff $D'$ has integer coordinates.


Note: It may not seem like we considered that the coordinates of $B$ have to be integers, but since the slopes of $\overline{AB}$ are all rational, we can just extend $\overline{AB}$ by some arbitrary amount so that $B$ becomes a lattice point, which won't affect the position of $D'$. ~inaccessibles

Solution 2

A very natural solution: . Shift $A$ to the origin. Suppose point $B$ was $(x, kx)$. Note $k$ is the slope we're looking for. Note that point $C$ must be of the form: $(x \pm 1, kx \pm 7)$ or $(x \pm 7, kx \pm 1)$ or $(x \pm 5, kx \pm 5)$. Note that we want the slope of the line connecting $D$ and $C$ so also be $k$, since $AB$ and $CD$ are parallel. Instead of dealing with the 12 cases, we consider point $C$ of the form $(x \pm Y, kx \pm Z)$ where we plug in the necessary values for $Y$ and $Z$ after simplifying. Since the slopes of $AB$ and $CD$ must both be $k$, $\frac{7 - kx \pm Z}{1 - x \pm Y} = k \implies k = \frac{7 \pm Z}{1 \pm Y}$. Plugging in the possible values of $\pm 7, \pm 1, \pm 5$ in their respective pairs and ruling out degenerate cases, we find the sum is $\frac{119}{12} \implies m + n = \boxed{131}$ - whatRthose

(Note: This Solution is a lot faster if you rule out $(Y, Z) = (1, 7)$ due to degeneracy.)

See also

2000 AIME II (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 10
Followed by
Problem 12
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