1978 AHSME Problems/Problem 20

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If $a,b,c$ are non-zero real numbers such that $\frac{a+b-c}{c}=\frac{a-b+c}{b}=\frac{-a+b+c}{a}$, and $x=\frac{(a+b)(b+c)(c+a)}{abc}$, and $x<0$, then $x$ equals

$\textbf{(A) }-1\qquad \textbf{(B) }-2\qquad \textbf{(C) }-4\qquad \textbf{(D) }-6\qquad  \textbf{(E) }-8$

Solution

Take the first two expressions (you can actually take any two expressions): $\frac{a+b-c}{c}=\frac{a-b+c}{b}$.

$\frac{a+b}{c}=\frac{a+c}{b}$

$ab+b^2=ac+c^2$

$a(b-c)+b^2-c^2=0$

$(a+b+c)(b-c)=0$

$\Rightarrow a+b+c=0$ OR $b=c$

The first solution gives us $x=\frac{(-c)(-a)(-b)}{abc}=-1$.

The second solution gives us $a=b=c$, and $x=\frac{8a^3}{a^3}=8$, which is not negative, so this solution doesn't work.

Therefore, $x=1\Rightarrow\boxed{A}$.

See also

1978 AHSME (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 19
Followed by
Problem 21
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