1997 JBMO Problems/Problem 4

Revision as of 13:58, 4 August 2018 by Rockmanex3 (talk | contribs) (WIP Solution)

Problem

Determine the triangle with sides $a,b,c$ and circumradius $R$ for which $R(b+c) = a\sqrt{bc}$.

Solution

Solving for $R$ yields $R = \tfrac{a\sqrt{bc}}{b+c}$. We can substitute $R$ into the area formula $A = \tfrac{abc}{4R}$ to get \begin{align*} A &= \frac{abc}{4 \cdot \tfrac{a\sqrt{bc}}{b+c} } \\ &= \frac{abc}{4a\sqrt{bc}} \cdot (b+c) \\ &= \frac{(b+c)\sqrt{bc}}{4}. \end{align*} We also know that $A = \tfrac{1}{2}ab \sin(\theta)$, where $\theta$ is the angle between sides $b$ and $c.$ Substituting this yields \begin{align*} \tfrac{1}{2}ab \sin(\theta) &= \frac{(b+c)\sqrt{bc}}{4} \\ 2\sqrt{bc} \cdot \sin(\theta) &= b+c \\ \sin(\theta) &= \frac{b+c}{2\sqrt{bc}} \end{align*} Since $\theta$ is inside a triangle, $0 < \sin{\theta} \le 1$.


See Also

1997 JBMO (ProblemsResources)
Preceded by
Problem 3
Followed by
Problem 5
1 2 3 4 5
All JBMO Problems and Solutions