Difference between revisions of "2002 AIME II Problems/Problem 15"

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== See also ==
 
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Revision as of 02:20, 6 December 2019

Problem

Circles $\mathcal{C}_{1}$ and $\mathcal{C}_{2}$ intersect at two points, one of which is $(9,6)$, and the product of the radii is $68$. The x-axis and the line $y = mx$, where $m > 0$, are tangent to both circles. It is given that $m$ can be written in the form $a\sqrt {b}/c$, where $a$, $b$, and $c$ are positive integers, $b$ is not divisible by the square of any prime, and $a$ and $c$ are relatively prime. Find $a + b + c$.

Solution

Let the smaller angle between the $x$-axis and the line $y=mx$ be $\theta$. Note that the centers of the two circles lie on the angle bisector of the angle between the $x$-axis and the line $y=mx$. Also note that if $(x,y)$ is on said angle bisector, we have that $\frac{y}{x}=\tan{\frac{\theta}{2}}$. Let $\tan{\frac{\theta}{2}}=m_1$, for convenience. Therefore if $(x,y)$ is on the angle bisector, then $x=\frac{y}{m_1}$. Now let the centers of the two relevant circles be $(a/m_1 , a)$ and $(b/m_1 , b)$ for some positive reals $a$ and $b$. These two circles are tangent to the $x$-axis, so the radii of the circles are $a$ and $b$ respectively. We know that the point $(9,6)$ is a point on both circles, so we have that

\[(9-\frac{a}{m_1})^2+(6-a)^2=a^2\]

\[(9-\frac{b}{m_1})^2+(6-b)^2=b^2\]

Expanding these and manipulating terms gives

\[\frac{1}{m_1^2}a^2-[(18/m_1)+12]a+117=0\]

\[\frac{1}{m_1^2}b^2-[(18/m_1)+12]b+117=0\]

It follows that $a$ and $b$ are the roots of the quadratic

\[\frac{1}{m_1^2}x^2-[(18/m_1)+12]x+117=0\]

It follows from Vieta's Formulas that the product of the roots of this quadratic is $117m_1^2$, but we were also given that the product of the radii was 68. Therefore $68=117m_1^2$, or $m_1^2=\frac{68}{117}$. Note that the half-angle formula for tangents is

\[\tan{\frac{\theta}{2}}=\sqrt{\frac{1-\cos{\theta}}{1+\cos{\theta}}}\]

Therefore

\[\frac{68}{117}=\frac{1-\cos{\theta}}{1+\cos{\theta}}\]

Solving for $\cos{\theta}$ gives that $\cos{\theta}=\frac{49}{185}$. It then follows that $\sin{\theta}=\sqrt{1-\cos^2{\theta}}=\frac{12\sqrt{221}}{185}$.

It then follows that $m=\tan{\theta}=\frac{12\sqrt{221}}{49}$. Therefore $a=12$, $b=221$, and $c=49$. The desired answer is then $12+221+49=\boxed{282}$.

See also

2002 AIME II (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 14
Followed by
Last Question
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All AIME Problems and Solutions

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