2015 AIME I Problems/Problem 11
Problem
Triangle
has positive integer side lengths with
. Let
be the intersection of the bisectors of
and
. Suppose
. Find the smallest possible perimeter of
.
Solution 1 (No Trig)
Let
and the foot of the altitude from
to
be point
and
. Since ABC is isosceles,
is on
. By Pythagorean Theorem,
. Let
and
. By Angle Bisector theorem,
. Also,
. Solving for
, we get
. Then, using Pythagorean Theorem on
we have
. Simplifying, we have
. Factoring out the
, we have
. Adding 1 to the fraction and simplifying, we have
. Crossing out the
, and solving for
yields
. Then, we continue as Solution 2 does.
Solution 2 (Trig)
Let
be the midpoint of
. Then by SAS Congruence,
, so
.
Now let
,
, and
.
Then
and
.
Cross-multiplying yields
.
Since
,
must be positive, so
.
Additionally, since
has hypotenuse
of length
,
.
Therefore, given that
is an integer, the only possible values for
are
,
,
, and
.
However, only one of these values,
, yields an integral value for
, so we conclude that
and
.
Thus the perimeter of
must be
.
Solution 3
Let
, call the midpoint of
point
, call the point where the incircle meets
point
, and let
. We are looking for the minimum value of
.
is an altitude because the triangle is isosceles. By Pythagoras on
, the inradius is
and by Pythagoras on
,
is
. By equal tangents,
, so
. Since
is an inradius,
and using pythagoras on
yields ![]()
.
is similar to
by
, so we can write
. Simplifying,
. Squaring, subtracting 1 from both sides, and multiplying everything out, we get
, which turns into
. Finish as above.
See Also
| 2015 AIME I (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
| Preceded by Problem 10 |
Followed by Problem 12 | |
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