2019 AMC 12B Problems/Problem 25: Difference between revisions
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~ numberwhiz | ~ numberwhiz | ||
While the solutions above have attempted the problem in general, knowing the fact that <math>\triangle ABD</math> is equilateral greatly reduces the effort to find the final answer, hence I propose an alternative after this. | |||
Let <math>AB = BD = AD = x</math> and <math>\angle BCD = \theta</math>. By cosine rule on <math>\triangle BCD</math> : | |||
<cmath>x^2 = 40 - 24\cos \theta</cmath> | |||
Thus, the total area of the quadrilateral is supposedly : | |||
<cmath>\frac{\sqrt{3}}{4}(x^2) + \frac{1}{2}(2)(6)\sin \theta</cmath> | |||
<cmath>\implies \frac{\sqrt{3}}{4}(40 - 24\cos \theta) + 6\sin \theta</cmath> | |||
<cmath>\implies 6(\sin \theta - \sqrt{3}\cos \theta) + 10\sqrt{3} \geq 12 + 10\sqrt{3}</cmath> | |||
Where the inequality comes from a common trigonometric identity, <math>(\sin \theta - \sqrt{3}\cos \theta) \geq \sqrt{1^2 + \big(\sqrt{3}\big)^2} = 2.</math> | |||
~ SouradipClash_03 | |||
==Video Solution by MOP 2024== | ==Video Solution by MOP 2024== | ||
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Let <math>X, Y, Z</math> be the centroids of <math>\triangle ABC, \triangle BCD, \triangle ACD</math> respectively, then | Let <math>X, Y, Z</math> be the centroids of <math>\triangle ABC, \triangle BCD, \triangle ACD</math> respectively, then | ||
<math>XZ//BD</math>, since <math>EX=\frac13 | <math>XZ//BD</math>, since <math>EX=\frac13 EB, EZ=\frac13 ED</math>, | ||
<math>XY//GE</math>, since <math>BX=\frac23BE, BY=\frac23BG, EG//AD</math> by midsegment theorem, so <math>XY//AD</math> | <math>XY//GE</math>, since <math>BX=\frac23BE, BY=\frac23BG, EG//AD</math> by midsegment theorem, so <math>XY//AD</math> | ||
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The maximal value happens when <math>\sin(\alpha-60^\circ)=1</math>, and the value is <math> | The maximal value happens when <math>\sin(\alpha-60^\circ)=1</math>, and the value is <math>10\sqrt3+12</math>, and the answer is <math>\boxed{\textbf{(C)} 12+10\sqrt3}</math>. | ||
<asy> | <asy> | ||
Latest revision as of 00:48, 14 July 2025
Problem
Let
be a convex quadrilateral with
and
Suppose that the centroids of
and
form the vertices of an equilateral triangle. What is the maximum possible value of the area of
?
Solution 1 (vectors)
Place an origin at
, and assign position vectors of
and
. Since
is not parallel to
, vectors
and
are linearly independent, so we can write
for some constants
and
. Now, recall that the centroid of a triangle
has position vector
.
Thus the centroid of
is
; the centroid of
is
; and the centroid of
is
.
Hence
,
, and
. For
to be equilateral, we need
. Further,
. Hence we have
, so
is equilateral.
Now let the side length of
be
, and let
. By the Law of Cosines in
, we have
. Since
is equilateral, its area is
, while the area of
is
. Thus the total area of
is
, where in the last step we used the subtraction formula for
. Alternatively, we can use calculus to find the local maximum. Observe that
has maximum value
when e.g.
, which is a valid configuration, so the maximum area is
.
Solution 2
Let
,
,
be the centroids of
,
, and
respectively, and let
be the midpoint of
.
,
, and
are collinear due to well-known properties of the centroid. Likewise,
,
, and
are collinear as well. Because (as is also well-known)
and
, we have
. This implies that
is parallel to
, and in terms of lengths,
. (SAS Similarity)
We can apply the same argument to the pair of triangles
and
, concluding that
is parallel to
and
. Because
(due to the triangle being equilateral),
, and the pair of parallel lines preserve the
angle, meaning
. Therefore
is equilateral.
At this point, we can finish as in Solution 1, or, to avoid using trigonometry, we can continue as follows:
Let
, where
due to the Triangle Inequality in
. By breaking the quadrilateral into
and
, we can create an expression for the area of
. We use the formula for the area of an equilateral triangle given its side length to find the area of
and Heron's formula to find the area of
.
After simplifying,
Substituting
, the expression becomes
We can ignore the
for now and focus on
.
By the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality,
The RHS simplifies to
, meaning the maximum value of
is
.
Thus the maximum possible area of
is
.
Solution 3 (Complex Numbers)
Let
,
,
, and
correspond to the complex numbers
,
,
, and
, respectively. Then, the complex representations of the centroids are
,
, and
. The pairwise distances between the centroids are
,
, and
, all equal. Thus,
, so
. Hence,
is equilateral.
By the Law of Cosines,
.
. Thus, the maximum possible area of
is
.
~ Leo.Euler
Solution 4 (Homothety)
Let
, and
be the centroids of
, and
, respectively, and let
and
be the midpoints of
and
, respectively. Note that
and
are
of the way from
to
and
, respectively, by a well-known property of centroids. Then a homothety centered at
with ratio
maps
and
to
and
, respectively, implying that
is equilateral too. But
is the medial triangle of
, so
is also equilateral. We may finish with the methods in the solutions above.
~ numberwhiz
While the solutions above have attempted the problem in general, knowing the fact that
is equilateral greatly reduces the effort to find the final answer, hence I propose an alternative after this.
Let
and
. By cosine rule on
:
Thus, the total area of the quadrilateral is supposedly :
Where the inequality comes from a common trigonometric identity,
~ SouradipClash_03
Video Solution by MOP 2024
~r00tsOfUnity
Solution 5
Let
be the centroids of
respectively, then
, since
,
, since
by midsegment theorem, so
![]()
Similarly,,
Sois an equilateral triangle
Assume, then
, the area
The maximal value happens when, and the value is
, and the answer is
.
~szhangmath
See Also
| 2019 AMC 12B (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | |
| Preceded by Problem 24 |
Followed by Last Problem |
| 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 12 Problems and Solutions | |
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