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2004 AMC 12B Problems/Problem 24

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Problem

In \triangle ABC, AB = BC, and \overline{BD} is an altitude. Point E is on the extension of \overline{AC} such that BE = 10. The values of \tan \angle CBE, \tan \angle DBE, and \tan \angle ABE form a geometric progression, and the values of \cot \angle DBE, \cot \angle CBE, \cot \angle DBC form an arithmetic progression. What is the area of \triangle ABC?

size(120);defaultpen(0.7);pair A = (0,0), D = (5*2^.5/3,0), C = (10*2^.5/3,0), B = (5*2^.5/3,5*2^.5), E = (13*2^.5/3,0);draw(...

\mathrm{(A)}\ 16\qquad\mathrm{(B)}\ \frac {50}3\qquad\mathrm{(C)}\ 10\sqrt{3}\qquad\mathrm{(D)}\ 8\sqrt{5}\qquad\mathrm{(E)}\...

Solution

Let \alpha = DBC. Then the first condition tells us that \tan^2 DBE = \tan(DBE - \alpha)\tan(DBE + \alpha) = \frac {\tan^2 DBE - \tan^2 \alpha}{1 - \tan ^2 DBE \tan^2 \alpha}, and multiplying out gives us (\tan^4 DBE - 1) \tan^2 \alpha = 0. Since \tan\alpha \neq 0, we have \tan^4 DBE = 1 \Longrightarrow \angle DBE = 45^{\circ}.

The second condition tells us that 2\cot (45 - \alpha) = 1 + \cot \alpha. Expanding, we have 1 + \cot \alpha = 2\left[\frac {\cot \alpha + 1}{\cot \alpha - 1}\right] \Longrightarrow (\cot \alpha - 3)(\cot \alpha + 1) =.... Evidently \cot \alpha \neq - 1, so we get \cot \alpha = 3.

Now BD = 5\sqrt {2} and AC = 2BD \cot \alpha = \frac {10\sqrt {2}}{3}. Thus, [ABC] = \frac {1}{2} \cdot 5\sqrt {2} \cdot \frac {10\sqrt {2}}{3} = \frac {50}{3}\ \mathrm{(B)}.

See also

2004 AMC 12B (ProblemsResources)
Preceded by
Problem 23
Followed by
Problem 25
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