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2003 AIME I Problems/Problem 11

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Problem

An angle x is chosen at random from the interval 0^\circ < x < 90^\circ. Let p be the probability that the numbers \sin^2 x, \cos^2 x, and \sin x \cos x are not the lengths of the sides of a triangle. Given that p = d/n, where d is the number of degrees in \arctan m and m and n are positive integers with m + n < 1000, find m + n.

Solution

Note that the three expressions are symmetric with respect to interchanging \sin and \cos, and so the probability is symmetric around 45^\circ. Thus, take 0 < x < 45 so that \sin x < \cos x. Then \cos^2 x is the largest of the three given expressions and those three lengths not forming a triangle is equivalent to a violation of the triangle inequality

\cos^2 x > \sin^2 x + \sin x \cos x

This is equivalent to

\cos^2 x - \sin^2 x > \sin x \cos x

and, using some of our trigonometric identities, we can re-write this as \cos 2x > \frac 12 \sin 2x. Since we've chosen x \in (0, 45), \cos 2x > 0 so

2 > \tan 2x \Longrightarrow  x < \frac 12 \arctan 2.

The probability that x lies in this range is \frac 1{45} \cdot \left(\frac 12 \arctan 2\right) = \frac{\arctan 2}{90} so that m = 2, n = 90 and our answer is \boxed{092}.

See also

2003 AIME I (ProblemsResources)
Preceded by
Problem 10
Followed by
Problem 12
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
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