2009 AIME II Problems/Problem 13: Difference between revisions
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Let the radius be 1 instead. All lengths will be halved so we will multiply by <math>2^{12}</math> at the end. Place the semicircle on the complex plane, with the center of the circle being 0 and the diameter being the real axis. Then <math>C_1,\ldots, C_6</math> are 6 of the 14th roots of unity. Let <math>\omega=\text{cis}\frac{360^{\circ}}{14}</math>; then <math>C_1,\ldots, C_6</math> correspond to <math>\omega,\ldots, \omega^6</math>. Let <math>C_1',\ldots, C_6'</math> be their reflections across the diameter. These points correspond to <math>\omega^8\ldots, \omega^{13}</math>. Then the lengths of the segments are <math>|1-\omega|,\ldots, |1-\omega^6|,|1-\omega^8|,\ldots |1-\omega^{13}|</math>. Noting that <math>B</math> represents 1 in the complex plane, the desired product is | Let the radius be 1 instead. All lengths will be halved so we will multiply by <math>2^{12}</math> at the end. Place the semicircle on the complex plane, with the center of the circle being 0 and the diameter being the real axis. Then <math>C_1,\ldots, C_6</math> are 6 of the 14th roots of unity. Let <math>\omega=\text{cis}\frac{360^{\circ}}{14}</math>; then <math>C_1,\ldots, C_6</math> correspond to <math>\omega,\ldots, \omega^6</math>. Let <math>C_1',\ldots, C_6'</math> be their reflections across the diameter. These points correspond to <math>\omega^8\ldots, \omega^{13}</math>. Then the lengths of the segments are <math>|1-\omega|,\ldots, |1-\omega^6|,|1-\omega^8|,\ldots |1-\omega^{13}|</math>. Noting that <math>B</math> represents 1 in the complex plane, the desired product is | ||
< | <cmath> | ||
\begin{align*} | \begin{align*} | ||
BC_1\cdots BC_6 \cdot AC_1\cdots AC_6&= | BC_1\cdots BC_6 \cdot AC_1\cdots AC_6&= | ||
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&= | &= | ||
|(x-\omega^1)\ldots(x-\omega^6)(x-\omega^8)\ldots(x-\omega^{13})| | |(x-\omega^1)\ldots(x-\omega^6)(x-\omega^8)\ldots(x-\omega^{13})| | ||
\end{align*}</ | \end{align*}</cmath> | ||
for <math>x=1</math>. | for <math>x=1</math>. | ||
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(x-\omega^1)\ldots(x-\omega^6)(x-\omega^8)\ldots(x-\omega^{13})=\frac{x^{14}-1}{(x-1)(x+1)}=x^{12}+x^{10}+\cdots +x^2+1. | (x-\omega^1)\ldots(x-\omega^6)(x-\omega^8)\ldots(x-\omega^{13})=\frac{x^{14}-1}{(x-1)(x+1)}=x^{12}+x^{10}+\cdots +x^2+1. | ||
</cmath> | </cmath> | ||
Thus the product is <math>|x^{12}+\cdots +x^2+1|=7</math> (<math>x=1</math>) when the radius is 1, and the product is <math>2^{12}7=28672</math>. Thus the answer is <math>\boxed {672}</math>. | Thus the product is <math>|x^{12}+\cdots +x^2+1|=7</math> (<math>x=1</math>) when the radius is 1, and the product is <math>2^{12}\cdot 7=28672</math>. Thus the answer is <math>\boxed {672}</math>. | ||
=== Solution 2 === | === Solution 2 === | ||
Revision as of 21:42, 10 March 2014
Problem
Let
and
be the endpoints of a semicircular arc of radius
. The arc is divided into seven congruent arcs by six equally spaced points
,
,
,
. All chords of the form
or
are drawn. Let
be the product of the lengths of these twelve chords. Find the remainder when
is divided by
.
Solution
Solution 1
Let the radius be 1 instead. All lengths will be halved so we will multiply by
at the end. Place the semicircle on the complex plane, with the center of the circle being 0 and the diameter being the real axis. Then
are 6 of the 14th roots of unity. Let
; then
correspond to
. Let
be their reflections across the diameter. These points correspond to
. Then the lengths of the segments are
. Noting that
represents 1 in the complex plane, the desired product is
for
.
However, the polynomial
has as its zeros all 14th roots of unity except for
and
. Hence
Thus the product is
(
) when the radius is 1, and the product is
. Thus the answer is
.
Solution 2
Let
be the midpoint of
and
. Assume
is closer to
instead of
.
=
. Using the Law of Cosines,
=
,
=
,
.
.
.
=
So
=
. It can be rearranged to form
=
.
= -
, so we have
=
=
=
It can be shown that
=
, so
=
=
=
, so the answer is
Solution 3
Note that for each
the triangle
is a right triangle. Hence the product
is twice the area of the triangle
. Knowing that
, the area of
can also be expressed as
, where
is the length of the altitude from
onto
. Hence we have
.
By the definition of
we obviously have
.
From these two observations we get that the product we should compute is equal to
, which is the same identity as in Solution 1.
Computing the product of sines
In this section we show one way how to evaluate the product
.
Let
. The numbers
are the
-th complex roots of unity. In other words, these are the roots of the polynomial
. Then the numbers
are the roots of the polynomial
.
We just proved the identity
.
Substitute
. The right hand side is obviously equal to
. Let's now examine the left hand side.
We have:
Therefore the size of the left hand side in our equation is
. As the right hand side is
, we get that
. However, since sin
= sin
, then
would be the square root of
, or
, which is what we needed to find.
See Also
| 2009 AIME II (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
| Preceded by Problem 12 |
Followed by Problem 14 | |
| 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 | ||
| All AIME Problems and Solutions | ||
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