Difference between revisions of "2020 AIME II Problems/Problem 15"
(→Solution 3 (Law of Cosines)) |
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We add all these equations to get: | We add all these equations to get: | ||
<cmath>HT^2+XY^2=2(HT^2+TY^2) \qquad (1).</cmath> | <cmath>HT^2+XY^2=2(HT^2+TY^2) \qquad (1).</cmath> | ||
− | We have that <math>BH=HC=11</math> and <math>BT=TC=16</math>. Note that <math>HT \perp BC</math>, so by the Pythagorean Theorem, it follows that <math>HT^2=135</math>. We were also given that <math>XT^2+TY^2=1143-XY^2</math>, which we multiply by <math>2</math> to use equation <math>(1)</math>. <cmath>2(XT^2+TY^2)=2286-2 \cdot XY^2</cmath> Since <math>2(XT^2+TY^2)=HT^2+XY^2</math>, we have | + | We have that <math>BH=HC=11</math> and <math>BT=TC=16</math> using our midpoints. Note that <math>HT \perp BC</math>, so by the Pythagorean Theorem, it follows that <math>HT^2=135</math>. We were also given that <math>XT^2+TY^2=1143-XY^2</math>, which we multiply by <math>2</math> to use equation <math>(1)</math>. <cmath>2(XT^2+TY^2)=2286-2 \cdot XY^2</cmath> Since <math>2(XT^2+TY^2)=HT^2+XY^2</math>, we have |
<cmath>135+XY^2=2286-2 \cdot XY^2</cmath> <cmath>3 \cdot XY^2=2151.</cmath> | <cmath>135+XY^2=2286-2 \cdot XY^2</cmath> <cmath>3 \cdot XY^2=2151.</cmath> | ||
Therefore, <math>XY^2=\boxed{717}</math>. ~ MathLuis | Therefore, <math>XY^2=\boxed{717}</math>. ~ MathLuis |
Revision as of 12:41, 15 April 2021
Contents
[hide]Problem
Let be an acute scalene triangle with circumcircle
. The tangents to
at
and
intersect at
. Let
and
be the projections of
onto lines
and
, respectively. Suppose
,
, and
. Find
.
Solution
Assume to be the center of triangle
,
cross
at
, link
,
. Let
be the middle point of
and
be the middle point of
, so we have
. Since
, we have
. Notice that
, so
, and this gives us
. Since
is perpendicular to
,
and
cocycle (respectively), so
and
. So
, so
, which yields
So same we have
. Apply Ptolemy theorem in
we have
, and use Pythagoras theorem we have
. Same in
and triangle
we have
and
. Solve this for
and
and submit into the equation about
, we can obtain the result
.
(Notice that is a parallelogram, which is an important theorem in Olympiad, and there are some other ways of computation under this observation.)
-Fanyuchen20020715
Solution 2 (Official MAA)
Let denote the midpoint of
. The critical claim is that
is the orthocenter of
, which has the circle with diameter
as its circumcircle. To see this, note that because
, the quadrilateral
is cyclic, it follows that
implying that
. Similarly,
. In particular,
is a parallelogram.
Hence, by the Parallelogram Law,
But
. Therefore
Solution 3 (Law of Cosines)
Let be the orthocenter of
.
Lemma 1: is the midpoint of
.
Proof: Let be the midpoint of
, and observe that
and
are cyclical. Define
and
, then note that:
That implies that
,
, and
. Thus
and
;
is indeed the same as
, and we have proved lemma 1.
Since is cyclical,
and this implies that
is a paralelogram.
By the Law of Cosines:
We add all these equations to get:
We have that
and
using our midpoints. Note that
, so by the Pythagorean Theorem, it follows that
. We were also given that
, which we multiply by
to use equation
.
Since
, we have
Therefore,
. ~ MathLuis
See Also
2020 AIME II (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 14 |
Followed by Last Problem | |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 | ||
All AIME Problems and Solutions |
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