Monday, May 19, 2008

Geometry Problem 100



See complete Problem 100
Triangle, Angles, Midpoint, Congruence. Level: High School, SAT Prep, College geometry, Tutoring

Post your solutions or ideas in the comments.

4 comments:

  1. This follows quite trivially from the fact that AC²+BC²+2CD²=AD²+BD²=AB².

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  2. name x radius for AC, y for CB, z for CD, R for AB
    name Sa area above 1 & 2, Sb left of 1, Sc right of 2

    S1 + Sb = x²/2 (1)
    S2 + Sc = y²/2 (2)
    S1 + S2 + S3 + Sa = x∙y (3)
    ( from euklid theorem (2z)²=2x∙2y => z² = x∙y )

    S1 + S2 + S3 + S4 + S5 + Sa + Sb + Sc = R²/2 + S3

    (S1+Sb)+(S2+Sc)+(S1+S2+S3+Sa)-S1-S2+S4+S5 = R²/2 + S3
    substitute (1), (2), (3)

    (x²/2 + y²/2 + x∙y) - S1 - S2 + S4 + S5 = R²/2 + S3

    R²/2 - S1 - S2 + S4 + S5 = R²/2 + S3
    (R=x+y, R²=x²+2xy+y², R²/2 = x²/2 + xy + y²/2)

    S4 + S5 = S1 + S2 + S3

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  3. Let S(AB), S(AC), S(BC) and S(CD) be the areas of the semicircles with diameters AB, AC, BC and CD, respectively.
    We have S(AB) = 2S(CD) – S3 + S4 + S5 +
    + S(AC) – S1 + S(BC) – S2, so
    S1 + S2 + S3 = S4 + S5 + S(AC) + S(BC) +
    + 2S(CD) – S(AB).
    Thus, to prove that S1 + S2 + S3 = S4 + S5, it’s enough to prove that
    S(AB) = S(AC) + S(BC) + 2S(CD).
    We have S(AC) + S(BC) + 2S(CD) =
    = (pi/2)[AC^2/4 + BC^2/4 + 2.CD^2/4] =
    = (pi/2)[AC^2/4 + CD^2/4 + BC^2/4 + CD*2/4] =
    = (pi/2)[(AD^2/4 + BD^2/4] = (pi/2)(AB^2/4) =
    = S(AB).
    Q.E.D.

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  4. let the midpoint of AB is O, connect OD
    let "L","M","N"and"R" be the names of circles having the diameter AB,CB,AC and CD respectively
    say CB/2=x & AC/2=y
    so , radius of "L"=2(x+Y)/2=x+y
    apply Pythagoras theorem in triangle DCO
    so the radius of "R"=2√xy/2 = √xy
    Area of L=1/2∏(x+y)^2
    area of M=1/2∏x^2
    area of N=1/2∏y^2
    L-M-N = ∏xy
    area of R= ∏xy
    so area of R= area of L-M-N
    R- (R-(S1+S2+S3)) = (L-M-N)- (R-(S1+S2+S3))
    so,S1+S2+S3=S4+S5

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