Talk:2013 AMC 12A Problems/Problem 12
2013 AMC 12A Problems/Problem 12Vt
Problem
The angles in a particular triangle are in arithmetic progression, and the side lengths are . The sum of the possible values of x equals
where
, and
are positive integers. What is
?
Solution
Because the angles are in an arithmetic progression, and the angles add up to , the second largest angle in the triangle must be
. Also, the side opposite of that angle must be the second longest because of the angle-side relationship. Any of the three sides,
,
, or
, could be the second longest side of the triangle.
The law of cosines can be applied to solve for in all three cases.
When the second longest side is , we get that
, therefore
. By using the quadratic formula,
, therefore
.
When the second longest side is , we get that
, therefore
.
When the second longest side is , we get that
, therefore
. Using the quadratic formula,
. However,
is not real, therefore the second longest side cannot equal
.
Adding the two other possibilities gets , with
, and
.
, which is answer choice
.
What about a plain jane 3-4-5 triangle, where x would equal 3? Is there something obvious about this that I'm missing? Help!