1990 USAMO Problems/Problem 5
Problem
An acute-angled triangle is given in the plane. The circle with diameter
intersects altitude
and its extension at points
and
, and the circle with diameter
intersects altitude
and its extensions at
and
. Prove that the points
lie on a common circle.
Solution 1
Let be the intersection of the two circles (other than
).
is perpendicular to both
,
implying
,
,
are collinear. Since
is the foot of the altitude from
:
,
,
are concurrent, where
is the orthocentre.
Now, is also the intersection of
,
which means that
,
,
are concurrent. Since
,
,
,
and
,
,
,
are cyclic,
,
,
,
are cyclic by the radical axis theorem.
Solution 2
Define as the foot of the altitude from
to
. Then,
is the orthocenter. We will denote this point as
.
Since
and
are both
,
lies on the circles with diameters
and
.
Now we use the Power of a Point theorem with respect to point . From the circle with diameter
we get
. From the circle with diameter
we get
. Thus, we conclude that
, which implies that
,
,
, and
all lie on a circle.
Solution 3 (Radical Lemma)
Let be the circumcircle with diameter
and
be the circumcircle with diameter
. We claim that the second intersection of
and
other than
is
, where
is the feet of the perpendicular from
to segment
. Note that
so
lies on
Similarly,
lies on
. Hence,
is the radical axis of
and
. By the Radical Lemma, it suffices to prove that the intersection of lines
and
lie on
. But,
is the same line as
and
is the same line as
. Since
, and
intersect at the orthocenter
,
lies on the radical axis
and we are done.
Alternate solutions are always welcome. If you have a different, elegant solution to this problem, please add it to this page.
See Also
1990 USAMO (Problems • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 4 |
Followed by Last Question | |
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 | ||
All USAMO Problems and Solutions |
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