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1983 AIME Problems/Problem 14

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Problem

In the adjoining figure, two circles with radii and are drawn with their centers units apart. At , one of the points of intersection, a line is drawn in sich a way that the chords and have equal length. ( is the midpoint of ) Find the square of the length of .

Image:1983_AIME-14.png

Contents

Solution

Solution 1

First, notice that if we reflect over we get . Since we know that is on circle and is on circle , we can reflect circle over to get another circle (centered at a new point with radius ) that intersects circle at . The rest is just finding lengths:

Since is the midpoint of segment , is a median of triangle . Because we know that , , and , we can find the third side of the triangle using Stewart's Theorem or similar approaches. We get . So now we have a kite with , , and , and all we need is the length of the other diagonal . The easiest way it can be found is with the Pythagorean Theorem. Let be the length of . Then

\sqrt{36-x^2} + \sqrt{64-x^2} = \sqrt{56}.

Doing routine algebra on the above equation, we find that , so

Solution 2

This is a classic side chase - just set up equations involving key lengths in the diagram. Let the midpoints of be , and the midpoint of be . Let be the length of , and that of .

This solution is incomplete. You can help us out by completing it.

Solution 3

Let . Angles , , and must add up to . By the Law of Cosines, . Also, angles and equal and . So we have
\cos^{-1}(x/16)+\cos^{-1}(-11/24)=180-\cos^{-1}(x/12).
Taking the of both sides and simplifying using the cosine addition identity gives .

Solution 4

Let the circles of radius and be centered at and respectively. Let the midpoints of and be and Dropping a perpendicular from to (let the point be ) gives a rectangle.

Now note that triangle is right. Let the midpoint of (segment of length ) be Hence,

By now obvious similar triangles, so it's a quick system of two linear equations to solve for the desired length.

See also

1983 AIME (ProblemsResources)
Preceded by
Problem 13
Followed by
Problem 15
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
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