2011 AIME II Problems/Problem 10
Contents
Problem 10
A circle with center
has radius 25. Chord
of length 30 and chord
of length 14 intersect at point
. The distance between the midpoints of the two chords is 12. The quantity
can be represented as
, where
and
are relatively prime positive integers. Find the remainder when
is divided by 1000.
Solution 1
Let
and
be the midpoints of
and
, respectively, such that
intersects
.
Since
and
are midpoints,
and
.
and
are located on the circumference of the circle, so
.
The line through the midpoint of a chord of a circle and the center of that circle is perpendicular to that chord, so
and
are right triangles (with
and
being the right angles). By the Pythagorean Theorem,
, and
.
Let
,
, and
be lengths
,
, and
, respectively. OEP and OFP are also right triangles, so
, and
We are given that
has length 12, so, using the Law of Cosines with
:
Substituting for
and
, and applying the Cosine of Sum formula:
and
are acute angles in right triangles, so substitute opposite/hypotenuse for sines and adjacent/hypotenuse for cosines:
Combine terms and multiply both sides by
:
Combine terms again, and divide both sides by 64:
Square both sides:
This reduces to
;
.
Solution 2 - Fastest
We begin as in the first solution. Once we see that
has side lengths
,
, and
, we can compute its area with Heron's formula:
Thus, the circumradius of triangle
is
. Looking at
, we see that
, which makes it a cyclic quadrilateral. This means
's circumcircle and
's inscribed circle are the same.
Since
is cyclic with diameter
, we have
, so
and the answer is
.
Solution 3
We begin as the first solution have
and
. Because
, Quadrilateral
is inscribed in a Circle. Assume point
is the center of this circle.
point
is on
Link
and
, Made line
, then
On the other hand,
As a result,
Therefore,
As a result,
Solution 4
Let
.
Proceed as the first solution in finding that quadrilateral
has side lengths
,
,
, and
, and diagonals
and
.
We note that quadrilateral
is cyclic and use Ptolemy's theorem to solve for
:
Solving, we have
so the answer is
.
-Solution by blueberrieejam
~bluesoul changes the equation to a right equation, the previous equation isn't solvable
Solution 5 (Quick Angle Solution)
Let
be the midpoint of
and
of
. As
, quadrilateral
is cyclic with diameter
. By Cyclic quadrilaterals note that
.
The area of
can be computed by Herons as
The area is also
. Therefore,
~ Aaryabhatta1
Solution 6
Define
and
as the midpoints of
and
, respectively. Because
, we have that
is a cyclic quadrilateral. Hence,
Then, let these two angles be denoted as
.
Now, assume WLOG that
and
(We can do this because one of
or
must be less than 7, and similarly for
and
). Then, by Power of a Point on P with respect to the circle with center
, we have that
Then, let
. From Law of Cosines on
, we have that
Plugging in
in gives
Hence,
Then, we also know that
Squaring this, we get
Equating our expressions for
, we get
Solving gives us that
.
Since
, from the Pythagorean Theorem,
,
and thus the answer is
, which when divided by a thousand leaves a remainder of
-Mr.Sharkman
Note: my solution was very long and tedious. It was definitely was the least elegant solution. The only thing I like about it is it contains no quadratic equations (unless you count LoC).
Solution 7 Analytic Geometry
Let
and
be the midpoints of
and
, respectively, such that
intersects
.
Since
and
are midpoints,
and
.
and
are located on the circumference of the circle, so
.
Since
and
,
and
With law of cosines,
Since
,
is acute angle.
and
Let
line be
axis.
Line
equation is
.
Since line
passes point
and perpendicular to
, its equation is
where
,
Since
is the intersection of
and
,
(Negative means point
is between point
and
)
and the answer is
.
Note: if
was longer, point
would be between point
and
. Then,
would be the diagonal of quadrilateral
not the side. To apply Ptolemy's theorem like solution 4, it is critical to know whether
is the diagonal or side of quadrilateral. Equation for wrong case cannot be solved. For example,
See also
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