2002 AMC 12A Problems/Problem 18
Contents
Problem
Let and
be circles defined by
and
respectively. What is the length of the shortest line segment
that is tangent to
at
and to
at
?
Solution 1
(C) First examine the formula , for the circle
. Its center,
, is located at (10,0) and it has a radius of
= 6. The next circle, using the same pattern, has its center,
, at (-15,0) and has a radius of
= 9. So we can construct this diagram:
Line PQ is tangent to both circles, so it forms a right angle with the radii (6 and 9). This, as well as the two vertical angles near O, prove triangles S
QO and S
PO similar by AA, with a scale factor of 6:9, or 2:3. Next, we must subdivide the line D
D
in a 2:3 ratio to get the length of the segments D
O and D
O. The total length is 10 - (-15), or 25, so applying the ratio, D
O = 15 and D
O = 10. These are the hypotenuses of the triangles. We already know the length of D
Q and D
P, 9 and 6 (they're radii). So in order to find PQ, we must find the length of the longer legs of the two triangles and add them.
Finally, the length of PQ is , or C.
Solution 2
Using the above diagram, imagine that segment is shifted to the right to match up with
. Then shift
downwards to make a right triangle. We know
from the given information and the newly created leg has length
. Hence by Pythagorean theorem
.
, or C.
See Also
2002 AMC 12A (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | |
Preceded by Problem 17 |
Followed by Problem 19 |
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