2003 AIME I Problems/Problem 12
Problem
In convex quadrilateral and
The perimeter of
is 640. Find
(The notation
means the greatest integer that is less than or equal to
)
Solution
Solution 1
![[asy] real x = 1.60; /* arbitrary */ pointpen = black; pathpen = black+linewidth(0.7); size(180); real BD = x*x + 1.80*1.80 - 2 * 1.80 * x * 7 / 9; pair A=(0,0),B=(1.8,0),D=IP(CR(A,x),CR(B,BD)),C=OP(CR(D,1.8),CR(B,2.80 - x)); D(MP("A",A)--MP("B",B)--MP("C",C)--MP("D",D,N)--B--A--D); MP("180",(A+B)/2); MP("180",(C+D)/2,NE); D(anglemark(B,A,D)); D(anglemark(D,C,B)); [/asy]](http://latex.artofproblemsolving.com/0/6/0/060d4d918b4f89b6f156f9af44aea8da1238fcdd.png)
Let so
. By the Law of Cosines in
at angle
and in
at angle
,
Then
and grouping the
terms gives
.
Since ,
and thus
so
and so
.
Solution 2
Notice that , and
, and
, so we have side-side-angle matching on triangles
and
. Since the problem does not allow
, we know that
is not a right angle, and there is a unique other triangle with the matching side-side-angle.
Extend to
so that
is isosceles with
. Then notice that
has matching side-side-angle, and yet
because
is not right. Therefore
is the unique triangle mentioned above, so
is congruent, in some order of vertices, to
. Since
would imply
, making quadrilateral
degenerate, we must have
.
Since the perimeter of is
,
. Hence
. Drop the altitude of
from
and call the foot
. Then right triangle trigonometry on
shows that
, so
.
See also
2003 AIME I (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 11 |
Followed by Problem 13 | |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 | ||
All AIME Problems and Solutions |