2015 AIME I Problems/Problem 4: Difference between revisions
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==Problem== | ==Problem== | ||
Point <math>B</math> lies on line segment <math>\overline{AC}</math> with <math>AB=16</math> and <math>BC=4</math>. Points <math>D</math> and <math>E</math> lie on the same side of line <math>AC</math> forming equilateral triangles <math>\triangle ABD</math> and <math>\triangle BCE</math>. Let <math>M</math> be the midpoint of <math>\overline{AE}</math>, and <math>N</math> be the midpoint of <math>\overline{CD}</math>. The area of <math>\triangle BMN</math> is <math>x</math>. Find <math>x^2</math>. | Point <math>B</math> lies on line segment <math>\overline{AC}</math> with <math>AB=16</math> and <math>BC=4</math>. Points <math>D</math> and <math>E</math> lie on the same side of line <math>AC</math> forming equilateral triangles <math>\triangle ABD</math> and <math>\triangle BCE</math>. Let <math>M</math> be the midpoint of <math>\overline{AE}</math>, and <math>N</math> be the midpoint of <math>\overline{CD}</math>. The area of <math>\triangle BMN</math> is <math>x</math>. Find <math>x^2</math>. | ||
==Diagram== | |||
<asy> | |||
pair A = (0, 0), B = (16, 0), C = (20, 0), D = (8, 8*sqrt(3)), EE = (18, 2*sqrt(3)), M = (9, sqrt(3)), NN = (14, 4*sqrt(3)); | |||
draw(A--B--D--cycle); | |||
draw(B--C--EE--cycle); | |||
draw(A--EE); | |||
draw(C--D); | |||
draw(B--M--NN--cycle); | |||
dot(A); | |||
dot(B); | |||
dot(C); | |||
dot(D); | |||
dot(EE); | |||
dot(M); | |||
dot(NN); | |||
label("A", A, SW); | |||
label("B", B, S); | |||
label("C", C, SE); | |||
label("D", D, N); | |||
label("E", EE, N); | |||
label("M", M, NW); | |||
label("N", NN, NE); | |||
</asy> | |||
Diagram by [[User:RedFireTruck|<font color="#FF0000">RedFireTruck</font>]] ([[User talk:RedFireTruck|<font color="#FF0000">talk</font>]]) 18:52, 15 February 2021 (EST) | |||
==Solution== | ==Solution== | ||
Revision as of 18:52, 15 February 2021
Problem
Point
lies on line segment
with
and
. Points
and
lie on the same side of line
forming equilateral triangles
and
. Let
be the midpoint of
, and
be the midpoint of
. The area of
is
. Find
.
Diagram
Diagram by RedFireTruck (talk) 18:52, 15 February 2021 (EST)
Solution
Let point
be at
. Then,
is at
, and
is at
. Due to symmetry, it is allowed to assume
and
are in quadrant 1. By equilateral triangle calculations, Point
is at
, and Point
is at
. By Midpoint Formula,
is at
, and
is at
. The distance formula shows that
. Therefore, by equilateral triangle area formula,
, so
is
.
Solution 2
Use the same coordinates as above for all points. Then use the Shoelace Formula/Method on triangle
to solve for its area.
Solution 3
Note that
and
. Also,
. Thus,
by SAS.
From this, it is clear that a
rotation about
will map
to
.
This rotation also maps
to
. Thus,
and
. Thus,
is equilateral.
Using the Law of Cosines on
,
Thus,
.
Using Stewart's Theorem on
,
Calculating the area of
,
Thus,
, so
. Our final answer is
.
Admittedly, this is much more tedious than the coordinate solutions.
I also noticed that there are two more ways of showing that
is equilateral:
One way is to show that
,
, and
are related by a spiral similarity centered at
.
The other way is to use the Mean Geometry Theorem. Note that
and
are similar and have the same orientation. Note that
is the weighted average of
and
,
is the weighted average of
and
, and
is the weighted average of
and
. The weights are the same for all three averages. (The weights are actually just
and
, so these are also unweighted averages.) Thus, by the Mean Geometry Theorem,
is similar to both
and
, which means that
is equilateral.
See Also
| 2015 AIME I (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
| Preceded by Problem 3 |
Followed by Problem 5 | |
| 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 | ||
| All AIME Problems and Solutions | ||
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