2020 AIME II Problems/Problem 13
Contents
- 1 Problem
- 2 Solution 1
- 3 Solution 2 (Complex Bash)
- 4 Solution 3 (Guess 1)
- 5 Solution 4 (Guess 2)
- 6 Solution 5 (Official MAA 1)
- 7 Solution 6 (Official MAA 2)
- 8 Solution 7 (Official MAA 3)
- 9 Solution 8 (The same circle)
- 10 Video Solution 1 by MOP 2024
- 11 Video Solution 2
- 12 Video Solution 3
- 13 Video Solution 4
Problem
Convex pentagon has side lengths
,
, and
. Moreover, the pentagon has an inscribed circle (a circle tangent to each side of the pentagon). Find the area of
.
Solution 1
Assume the incircle touches ,
,
,
,
at
respectively. Then let
,
,
. So we have
,
and
=7, solve it we have
,
,
. Let the center of the incircle be
, by SAS we can proof triangle
is congruent to triangle
, and triangle
is congruent to triangle
. Then we have
,
. Extend
, cross ray
at
, ray
at
, then by AAS we have triangle
is congruent to triangle
. Thus
. Let
, then
. So by law of cosine in triangle
and triangle
we can obtain
, solved it gives us
, which yield triangle
to be a triangle with side length 15, 15, 24, draw a height from
to
divides it into two triangles with side lengths 9, 12, 15, so the area of triangle
is 108. Triangle
is a triangle with side lengths 6, 8, 10, so the area of two of them is 48, so the area of pentagon is
.
-Fanyuchen20020715
Solution 2 (Complex Bash)
Suppose that the circle intersects ,
,
,
, and
at
,
,
,
, and
respectively. Then
,
,
,
, and
. So
,
,
,
, and
. Then
, so
. Then we can solve for each individually.
,
,
,
, and
. To find the radius, we notice that
, or
. Each of these angles in this could be represented by complex numbers. When two complex numbers are multiplied, their angles add up to create the angle of the resulting complex number. Thus,
is real. Expanding, we get:
On the last expanding, we only multiply the reals with the imaginaries and vice versa, because we only care that the imaginary component equals 0.
must equal 4, as r cannot be negative or be approximately equal to 1.
Thus, the area of
is
-nihao4112
Solution 3 (Guess 1)
This pentagon is very close to a regular pentagon with side lengths . The area of a regular pentagon with side lengths
is
.
is slightly greater than
given that
is slightly less than
.
is then slightly greater than
. We will approximate that to be
. The area is now roughly
, but because the actual pentagon is not regular, but has the same perimeter of the regular one that we are comparing to we can say that this is an overestimate on the area and turn the
into
thus turning the area into
which is
and since
is a multiple of the semiperimeter
, we can safely say that the answer is most likely
.
~Lopkiloinm
Solution 4 (Guess 2)
Because the AIME answers have to be a whole number it would meant the radius of the circle have to be a whole number, thus by drawing the diagram and experimenting, we can safely say the radius is 4 and the answer is 60
(Edit: While the guess would be technically correct, the assumption that the radius would have to be a whole number for the ans to be a whole number is wrong)
By EtherealMidnight
(Edit: I think that will actually work because the area of is equal to the semi-perimeter times the radius. By a simple calculation, we know that the semi-perimeter is an integer so the radius should also be an integer)
By YBSuburbanTea
...the radius could be a fraction with denominator 3, 5, or 15, and the area of the pentagon would still be an integer. - GeometryJake
Solution 5 (Official MAA 1)
Let be the inscribed circle,
be its center, and
be its radius. The area of
is equal to its semiperimeter,
times
, so the problem is reduced to finding
. Let
be the length of the tangent segment from
to
, and analogously define
,
,
, and
. Then
,
, and
, with a total of
. Hence
,
, and
. It follows that
and
. Let
be the point where
is tangent to
. Then
. Now we claim that points
are collinear, which can be proved if
. The sum of the internal angles in polygons
and
are equal, so
, which implies that
must be
. Therefore points
,
, and
are collinear.
Because
, it follows that
Another expression for
can be found as follows. Note that
and
, so
and
Applying the Law of Cosines to
and
gives
and
Hence
yielding
equivalently
Substituting
gives the quadratic equation
, with solutions
, and
. The solution
corresponds to a five-pointed star, which is not convex. Indeed, if
, then
,
, and
are less than
implying that
,
, and
are acute, which cannot happen in a convex pentagon. Thus
and
. The requested area is
.
Solution 6 (Official MAA 2)
Define ,
,
,
,
, and
as in Solution 5. Then, as in Solution 5,
,
,
,
, and
. Let
,
, and
. It follows that
, so
. Thus
,
, and
. By the Tangent Addition Formula,
and
Therefore
which simplifies to
. Then the solution proceeds as in Solution 5.
Solution 7 (Official MAA 3)
Define ,
,
,
,
, and
as in Solution 5. Note that
Hence
Therefore
Simplifying this equation gives the same quadratic equation in
as in Solution 5.
Solution 8 (The same circle)
Notation shown on diagram. As in solution 5, we get and so on.
Let cross
at
cross
at
Triangle
has semiperimeter
The radius of incircle is
Triangle has semiperimeter
The radius of excircle is
It is the same radius, therefore
Then the solution proceeds as in Solution 5.
vladimir.shelomovskii@gmail.com, vvsss
Video Solution 1 by MOP 2024
https://youtube.com/watch?v=BXEXcCNXrlM
~r00tsOfUnity
Video Solution 2
https://youtu.be/bz5N-jI2e0U?t=327
Video Solution 3
Video Solution 4
https://youtu.be/kn3c2LStiHA (solve in 5 minutes)
~MathProblemSolvingSkills.com
2020 AIME II (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 12 |
Followed by Problem 14 | |
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