2014 AIME II Problems/Problem 12

Revision as of 20:48, 27 March 2014 by Sat113 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Obviously, <math>A+B+C=180</math> in degrees. Note that <math>\cos{3C}=-\cos{(3A+3B)}</math>. Thus, our expression is of the form <math>\cos{3A}+\cos{3B}-\cos{(3A+3B)}=1</math>. ...")
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Obviously, $A+B+C=180$ in degrees. Note that $\cos{3C}=-\cos{(3A+3B)}$. Thus, our expression is of the form $\cos{3A}+\cos{3B}-\cos{(3A+3B)}=1$. Let $\cos{3A}=x$ and $\cos{3B}=y$. Expanding, we get $x+y-xy+\sqrt{1-x^2}\sqrt{1-y^2}=1$, or $-\sqrt{1-x^2}\sqrt{1-y^2}=(x-1)(y-1)$, which means that the right side must be non-positive and exactly one of $x$ and $y$ is $\leq{1}$. However, this means that the other variable must take on a value of 1. WLOG, we can set $\cos{3A}=1$, or $A=0,120$; however, only 120 is valid, as we want a degenerate triangle. Since $B+C=60$, the maximum angle between the sides is clearly 120 degrees. Using Law of Cosines on the triangle, we get $S^{2}=169+100+2(10)(13)(\frac{1}{2})=\framebox{399}$, and we're done.