1997 USAMO Problems/Problem 2
Problem
is a triangle. Take points
on the perpendicular bisectors of
respectively. Show that the lines through
perpendicular to
respectively are concurrent.
Solution 1
Let the perpendicular from A meet FE at A'. Define B' and C' similiarly. By Carnot's Theorem, The three lines are concurrent if
![$FA'^2-EA'^2+EC'^2-DC'^2+DB'^2-FB'^2 = AF^2-AE^2+CE^2-CD^2+BD^2-BF^2 = 0$](http://latex.artofproblemsolving.com/d/6/b/d6b20981adfbb3753b05f37c72c3239f774fc7c2.png)
But this is clearly true, since D lies on the perpendicular bisector of BC, BD = DC.
QED
Solution 2
We split this into two cases:
Case 1: are non-collinear
Observe that since lie on perpendicular bisectors, then we get that
,
, and
. This motivates us to construct a circle
centered at
with radius
, and similarly construct
and
respectively for
and
.
Now, clearly and
intersect at
and some other point. Now, we know that
is the line containing the two centers. So, the line perpendicular to
and passing through
must be the radical axis of
and
, which is exactly the line that the problem describes! We do this similarly for the others pairs of circles.
Now by the radical lemma, the pairwise radical axes of are concurrent, as desired, and they intersect at the radical center.
Case 2: are collinear
Now, we are drawing perpendicular lines from ,
, and
onto the single line
. Clearly, these lines are parallel and concur at the point of infinity.
Solution 3
Notice that and
are orthologic, so the perpendiculars concur at the opposite center of orthology.
See Also
1997 USAMO (Problems • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 1 |
Followed by Problem 3 | |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 | ||
All USAMO Problems and Solutions |
The problems on this page are copyrighted by the Mathematical Association of America's American Mathematics Competitions.