Difference between revisions of "1996 AIME Problems/Problem 15"
Mathgeek2006 (talk | contribs) m (→Solution 2 (trignometry)) |
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Expanding using the sine double and triple angle formulas, we have | Expanding using the sine double and triple angle formulas, we have | ||
− | <cmath>2\sqrt {2} \sin \theta \cos \theta = \sin\theta( - 4\sin ^2 \theta + 3) \Longrightarrow \sin \left | + | <cmath>2\sqrt {2} \sin \theta \cos \theta = \sin\theta( - 4\sin ^2 \theta + 3) \Longrightarrow \sin \theta\left(4\cos^2\theta - 2\sqrt {2} \cos \theta - 1\right) = 0.</cmath> |
− | By the [[quadratic formula]], we have <math>\cos \theta = \frac {2\sqrt {2} \pm \sqrt {8 + 4 \cdot 1 \cdot 4}}{8} = \frac {\sqrt {6} \pm \sqrt {2}}{4}</math>, so <math>\theta = 15^{\circ}</math> (as the other roots are too large to make sense in context). The answer follows as above. | + | By the [[quadratic formula]], we have <math>\cos \theta = \frac {2\sqrt {2} \pm \sqrt {8 + 4 \cdot 1 \cdot 4}}{8} = \frac {\sqrt {6} \pm \sqrt {2}}{4}</math>, so <math>\theta = 15^{\circ}</math> (as the other roots are too large to make sense in context). The answer follows as above. |
=== Solution 3 === <!-- I would put this solution first, but needs a bit of formatting for clarity - azjps --> | === Solution 3 === <!-- I would put this solution first, but needs a bit of formatting for clarity - azjps --> |
Revision as of 11:49, 13 March 2015
Problem
In parallelogram , let
be the intersection of diagonals
and
. Angles
and
are each twice as large as angle
, and angle
is
times as large as angle
. Find the greatest integer that does not exceed
.
Contents
[hide]Solution
Solution 1 (trignometry)
![[asy]size(180); pathpen = black+linewidth(0.7); pair B=(0,0), A=expi(pi/4), C=IP(A--A + 2*expi(17*pi/12), B--(3,0)), D=A+C, O=IP(A--C,B--D); D(MP("A",A,N)--MP("B",B)--MP("C",C)--MP("D",D,N)--cycle); D(B--D); D(A--C); D(MP("O",O,SE)); D(anglemark(D,B,A,4));D(anglemark(B,A,C,3.5));D(anglemark(B,A,C,4.5));D(anglemark(C,B,D,3.5));D(anglemark(C,B,D,4.5)); [/asy]](http://latex.artofproblemsolving.com/d/0/9/d09e1f91df6f1a2f004955349478e82b4cf67dad.png)
Let . Then
,
, and
. Since
is a parallelogram, it follows that
. By the Law of Sines on
,

Dividing the two equalities yields
Pythagorean and product-to-sum identities yield
and the double and triple angle () formulas further simplify this to
The only value of that fits in this context comes from
. The answer is
.
Solution 2 (trignometry)
Define as above. Since
, it follows that
, and so
. The Law of Sines on
yields that
Expanding using the sine double and triple angle formulas, we have
By the quadratic formula, we have , so
(as the other roots are too large to make sense in context). The answer follows as above.
Solution 3
We will focus on . Let
, so
. Draw the perpendicular from
intersecting
at
. Without loss of generality, let
. Then
, since
is the circumcenter of
. Then
.
By the Exterior Angle Theorem, and
. That implies that
. That makes
. Then since by AA (
and reflexive on
),
.

Then by the Pythagorean Theorem, . That makes
equilateral. Then
. The answer follows as above.
See also
1996 AIME (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 14 |
Followed by Final Problem | |
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.