Difference between revisions of "2015 USAMO Problems/Problem 2"
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Quadrilateral <math>APBQ</math> is inscribed in circle <math>\omega</math> with <math>\angle P = \angle Q = 90^{\circ}</math> and <math>AP = AQ < BP</math>. Let <math>X</math> be a variable point on segment <math>\overline{PQ}</math>. Line <math>AX</math> meets <math>\omega</math> again at <math>S</math> (other than <math>A</math>). Point <math>T</math> lies on arc <math>AQB</math> of <math>\omega</math> such that <math>\overline{XT}</math> is perpendicular to <math>\overline{AX}</math>. Let <math>M</math> denote the midpoint of chord <math>\overline{ST}</math>. As <math>X</math> varies on segment <math>\overline{PQ}</math>, show that <math>M</math> moves along a circle. | Quadrilateral <math>APBQ</math> is inscribed in circle <math>\omega</math> with <math>\angle P = \angle Q = 90^{\circ}</math> and <math>AP = AQ < BP</math>. Let <math>X</math> be a variable point on segment <math>\overline{PQ}</math>. Line <math>AX</math> meets <math>\omega</math> again at <math>S</math> (other than <math>A</math>). Point <math>T</math> lies on arc <math>AQB</math> of <math>\omega</math> such that <math>\overline{XT}</math> is perpendicular to <math>\overline{AX}</math>. Let <math>M</math> denote the midpoint of chord <math>\overline{ST}</math>. As <math>X</math> varies on segment <math>\overline{PQ}</math>, show that <math>M</math> moves along a circle. | ||
− | ===Solution=== | + | ===Solution 1=== |
− | + | ||
+ | We will use coordinate geometry. | ||
Without loss of generality, | Without loss of generality, |
Revision as of 06:39, 20 March 2016
Problem
Quadrilateral is inscribed in circle
with
and
. Let
be a variable point on segment
. Line
meets
again at
(other than
). Point
lies on arc
of
such that
is perpendicular to
. Let
denote the midpoint of chord
. As
varies on segment
, show that
moves along a circle.
Solution 1
We will use coordinate geometry.
Without loss of generality,
let the circle be the unit circle centered at the origin,
,
where
.
Let angle , which is an acute angle,
, then
.
Angle ,
.
Let
, then
.
The condition yields:
(E1)
Use identities ,
,
, we obtain
. (E1')
The condition that is on the circle yields
, namely
. (E2)
is the mid-point on the hypotenuse of triangle
, hence
, yielding
. (E3)
Expand (E3), using (E2) to replace with
, and using (E1') to replace
with
, and we obtain
, namely
, which is a circle centered at
with radius
.
Solution 2: Mostly synthetic
Let the midpoint of be
. We claim that
moves along a circle with radius
.
We will show that , which implies that
, and as
is fixed, this implies the claim.
by the median formula on
.
by the median formula on
.
.
As ,
from right triangle
.
By ,
.
Since is the circumcenter of
, and
is the circumradius, the expression
is the power of point
with respect to
. However, as
is also the power of point
with respect to
, this implies that
.
By ,
Finally, by AA similarity (
and
), so
.
By ,
, so
, as desired.
Solution 3
Note that each point on
corresponds to exactly one point on arc
. Also notice that since
is the diameter of
,
is always a right angle; therefore, point
is always
. WLOG, assume that
is on the coordinate plane, and
corresponds to the origin. The locus of
, since the locus of
is arc
, is the arc that is produced when arc
is dilated by
with respect to the origin, which resides on the circle
, which is produced when
is dilated by
with respect to the origin. By MSmathlete1018