Difference between revisions of "2009 AMC 10B Problems/Problem 18"

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</math>
 
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== Solution 3(Coordinate Geo)==
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== Solution 1 (Coordinate Geo)==
  
 
Set A to (0,0). Since M is the midpoint of the diagonal, it would be (4,-3). The Diagonal AC would be the line y= -(3/4)x. Since ME is perpendicular to AC, its line would be in the form y=((4/3)x)+b. Plugging in 4 and -3 for x and y would give b=25/3. To find the x intercept of y=((4/3)x)+25/3 we plug in 0 for y and get x=25/4. Then, using the Shoelace Formula for (0,0) , (4,-3), and (25/4,0), we find the area is 75/8.
 
Set A to (0,0). Since M is the midpoint of the diagonal, it would be (4,-3). The Diagonal AC would be the line y= -(3/4)x. Since ME is perpendicular to AC, its line would be in the form y=((4/3)x)+b. Plugging in 4 and -3 for x and y would give b=25/3. To find the x intercept of y=((4/3)x)+25/3 we plug in 0 for y and get x=25/4. Then, using the Shoelace Formula for (0,0) , (4,-3), and (25/4,0), we find the area is 75/8.
  
== Solution 1 ==  
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== Solution 2 ==  
 
<asy>
 
<asy>
 
unitsize(0.75cm);
 
unitsize(0.75cm);
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And as the area of triangle <math>ABC</math> is <math>\frac{6\cdot 8}2 = 24</math>, the area of triangle <math>AME</math> is <math>24\cdot \frac{25}{64} = \boxed{ \frac{75}8 }</math>.
 
And as the area of triangle <math>ABC</math> is <math>\frac{6\cdot 8}2 = 24</math>, the area of triangle <math>AME</math> is <math>24\cdot \frac{25}{64} = \boxed{ \frac{75}8 }</math>.
  
== Solution 2 (Only Pythagorean Theorem) ==  
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== Solution 3 (Only Pythagorean Theorem) ==  
 
<asy>
 
<asy>
 
unitsize(0.75cm);
 
unitsize(0.75cm);

Revision as of 23:25, 18 December 2019

Problem

Rectangle $ABCD$ has $AB=8$ and $BC=6$. Point $M$ is the midpoint of diagonal $\overline{AC}$, and $E$ is on $AB$ with $\overline{ME}\perp\overline{AC}$. What is the area of $\triangle AME$?

$\text{(A) } \frac{65}{8} \qquad \text{(B) } \frac{25}{3} \qquad \text{(C) } 9 \qquad \text{(D) } \frac{75}{8} \qquad \text{(E) } \frac{85}{8}$

Solution 1 (Coordinate Geo)

Set A to (0,0). Since M is the midpoint of the diagonal, it would be (4,-3). The Diagonal AC would be the line y= -(3/4)x. Since ME is perpendicular to AC, its line would be in the form y=((4/3)x)+b. Plugging in 4 and -3 for x and y would give b=25/3. To find the x intercept of y=((4/3)x)+25/3 we plug in 0 for y and get x=25/4. Then, using the Shoelace Formula for (0,0) , (4,-3), and (25/4,0), we find the area is 75/8.

Solution 2

[asy] unitsize(0.75cm); defaultpen(0.8); pair A=(0,0), B=(8,0), C=(8,6), D=(0,6), M=(A+C)/2; path ortho = shift(M)*rotate(-90)*(A--C); pair Ep = intersectionpoint(ortho, A--B); draw( A--B--C--D--cycle ); draw( A--C ); draw( M--Ep ); filldraw( A--M--Ep--cycle, lightgray, black ); draw( rightanglemark(A,M,Ep) ); label("$A$",A,SW); label("$B$",B,SE); label("$C$",C,NE); label("$D$",D,NW); label("$E$",Ep,S); label("$M$",M,NW); [/asy]

By the Pythagorean theorem we have $AC=10$, hence $AM=5$.

The triangles $AME$ and $ABC$ have the same angle at $A$ and a right angle, thus all their angles are equal, and therefore these two triangles are similar.

The ratio of their sides is $\frac{AM}{AB} = \frac 58$, hence the ratio of their areas is $\left( \frac 58 \right)^2 = \frac{25}{64}$.

And as the area of triangle $ABC$ is $\frac{6\cdot 8}2 = 24$, the area of triangle $AME$ is $24\cdot \frac{25}{64} = \boxed{ \frac{75}8 }$.

Solution 3 (Only Pythagorean Theorem)

[asy] unitsize(0.75cm); defaultpen(0.8); pair A=(0,0), B=(8,0), C=(8,6), D=(0,6), M=(A+C)/2; path ortho = shift(M)*rotate(-90)*(A--C); pair Ep = intersectionpoint(ortho, A--B); draw( A--B--C--D--cycle ); draw( A--C ); draw( M--Ep ); filldraw( A--M--Ep--cycle, lightgray, black ); draw( rightanglemark(A,M,Ep) ); draw( C--Ep ); label("$A$",A,SW); label("$B$",B,SE); label("$C$",C,NE); label("$D$",D,NW); label("$E$",Ep,S); label("$M$",M,NW); [/asy]

Draw $EC$ as shown from the diagram. Since $AC$ is of length $10$, we have that $AM$ is of length $5$, because of the midpoint $M$. Through the Pythagorean theorem, we know that $AE^2 = AM^2 + ME^2 \implies 25 + ME^2$, which means $AE = \sqrt{25 + ME^2}$. Define $ME$ to be $x$ for the sake of clarity. We know that $EB = 8 - \sqrt{25 + x^2}$. From here, we know that $CE^2 = CB^2 + BE^2 = ME^2 + MC^2$. From here, we can write the expression $6^2 + (8 - \sqrt{25 + x^2})^2 = 5^2 + x^2 \implies 36 + (64 - 16\sqrt{25 + x^2} + 25 + x^2) = 25 + x^2 \implies 100 - 16\sqrt{25 + x^2} \implies \sqrt{25 + x^2} = \frac{25}{4} \implies 25 + x^2 = \frac{625}{16} \implies 400 + 16x^2 = 625 \implies 16x^2 = 225 \implies x = \frac{15}{4}$. Now, remember $CE \neq \frac{15}{4}$. $x = \frac{15}{4} = ME$, since we set $x = ME$ in the start of the solution. Now to find the area $\frac{15}{4} \cdot 5 \cdot \frac{1}{2} = \frac{75}{8} = CE$

See Also

2009 AMC 10B (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 17
Followed by
Problem 19
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
All AMC 10 Problems and Solutions

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