1967 AHSME Problems/Problem 40
Contents
Problem
Located inside equilateral triangle is a point
such that
,
, and
. To the nearest integer the area of triangle
is:
Solution 1
Notice that That makes us want to construct a right triangle.
Rotate
about A. Note that
, so
Therefore, is equilateral, so
, which means
Let Notice that
and
Applying the Law of Cosines to (remembering
):
We want to find the area of , which is
~pfalcon
Solution 2 (Magic Formula)
Fun formula: Given a point whose distances from the vertices of an equilateral triangle are ,
, and
, the side length of the triangle is:
Given that the area of an equilateral triangle is , the answer is:
is not a choice, therefore the answer is
.
(Note that the answer is actually the solution for when point
is exterior to
.)
~proloto
Solution 3
Rotate and
CCW around
, becoming
and
. Rotate
and
CCW around
, becoming
and
. Rotate
and
CCW around
, becoming
and
:
Notice that since ,
, and
, then
Now the area of the big hexagon is easy to compute since it's comprised of 3 equilateral triangle and 3 right triangles:
~proloto
Solution 4(Answer Choices, Approximation)
Let be the side length of
Notice that
by the triangle inequality. This means that
This automatically rules out choices
and
Now, we will look at if the area is
. By the equilateral triangle area formula,
would equal
This is very close to
If
and
by the Pythagorean theorem and Pythagorean inequalities. Thus,
needs to be
and it probably cannot increase by more than
by just adding
to
(more rigorous proof below) Thus, the only viable answer choice is
- In fact, for
(
)
still holds. As
Thus, we know for sure that the nearest integer to the area cannot be
See also
1967 AHSC (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
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