The Devil's Triangle

Revision as of 10:56, 6 November 2020 by Redfiretruck (talk | contribs)

Definition

For any triangle $\triangle ABC$, let $D, E$ and $F$ be points on $BC, AC$ and $AB$ respectively. Devil's Triangle Theorem states that if $\frac{BD}{CD}=r, \frac{CE}{AE}=s$ and $\frac{AF}{BF}=t$, then $\frac{[DEF]}{[ABC]}=1-\frac{r(s+1)+s(t+1)+t(r+1)}{(r+1)(s+1)(t+1)}$.

Proofs

Proof 1

Proof by CoolJupiter:

We have the following ratios: $\frac{BD}{BC}=\frac{r}{r+1}, \frac{CD}{BC}=\frac{1}{r+1},\frac{CE}{AC}=\frac{s}{s+1}, \frac{AE}{AC}=\frac{1}{s+1},\frac{AF}{AB}=\frac{t}{t+1}, \frac{BF}{AB}=\frac{1}{t+1}$.

Now notice that $[DEF]=[ABC]-([BDF]+[CDE]+[AEF])$.

We attempt to find the area of each of the smaller triangles.


Notice that $\frac{[BDF]}{[ABC]}=\frac{BF}{AB}\times \frac{BD}{BC}=\frac{r}{(r+1)(t+1)}$ using the ratios derived earlier.


Similarly, $\frac{[CDE]}{[ABC]}=\frac{s}{(r+1)(s+1)}$ and $\frac{[AEF]}{[ABC]}=\frac{t}{(s+1)(t+1)}$.


Thus, $\frac{[BDF]+[CDE]+[AEF]}{[ABC]}=\frac{r}{(r+1)(t+1)}+\frac{s}{(r+1)(s+1)}+\frac{t}{(s+1)(t+1)}=\frac{r(s+1)+s(t+1)+t(r+1)}{(r+1)(s+1)(t+1)}$.

Finally, we have $\frac{[DEF]}{[ABC]}=\boxed{1-\frac{r(s+1)+s(t+1)+t(r+1)}{(r+1)(s+1)(t+1)}}$.

~@CoolJupiter

Proof 2

Proof by RedFireTruck (still under construction):

WLOG we let $A=(0, 0)$, $B=(1, 0)$, $C=(x, y)$ for $x$, $y\in\mathbb{R}$. We then use Shoelace Forumla to get $[ABC]=\frac12|y|$. We then figure out that $F=\left(\frac{t}{t+1}, 0\right)$, $E=\left(\frac{x}{s+1}, \frac{y}{s+1}\right)$, and $D=\left(\frac{rx+1}{r+1}, \frac{ry}{r+1}\right)$ so we know that by Shoelace Formula $\frac{[DEF]}{[ABC]}=\frac{\frac12\left|\frac{r^2y-ry+y}{(r+1)^2}\right|}{\frac12|y|}=\left|\frac{r^2-r+1}{(r+1)^2}\right|$. We know that $\frac{r^2-r+1}{(r+1)^2}\ge0$ for all $r\in\mathbb{R}$ so $\left|\frac{r^2-r+1}{(r+1)^2}\right|=\frac{r^2-r+1}{(r+1)^2}$.

Other Remarks

This theorem is a generalization of the Wooga Looga Theorem, which @RedFireTruck claims to have "rediscovered". The link to the theorem can be found here: https://artofproblemsolving.com/wiki/index.php/Wooga_Looga_Theorem

Essentially, Wooga Looga is a special case of this, specifically when $r=s=t$.


Testimonials

The Ooga Booga Tribe would be proud of you. Amazing theorem - RedFireTruck

This is Routh's theorem isn't it~ Ilovepizza2020