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Math Quiz 8
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Now that build season is over, it's that time again. |
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Credit to Jim Goehmann:
(K+1)^2 / (4K(K-1)) |
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I hadn't actually figured out if it was correct or not... Regardless, I want to see process!. There are usually a couple of different ways to approach a problem, and seeing someone else's process can help expand your own thinking :)
I'll probably take a crack at it later this week. Off the top of my head, we know the equation for a circle. The big circle is pretty well defined, sitting as it does with tangents x=0 and y=0. Then I'd try to define the second circle in relation to the first circle - a circle with the prescribed diameter ratio, a tangent at x=0 and a shared point with the big circle. From there, it's just a question of finding equation for the hypotenuse that is also a tangent for both circles. That'll lead you to the x and y intercepts, the length of the hypotenuse, and the length of the base. I just need to go look up those tangent equations again... Been way too long since I learned them! |
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I'm happy to see these again!
I got (k+1)^2 / (4 * sqrt(k) * (k-1)), given k > 0 and the diameters != 0 My working is attached below. I mixed up the question, and the equation written is the ratio of base to hypotenuse instead of the other way around. It took me a while to realize some of the geometry the circles provide (and accept the fact that I'd need to use trig), so this is the simplest but not the first solution I found. Edit: k > 1 |
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Attached is my solution. |
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Got a chance to talk to Jim again. Lost the sqrt on the k!
Well done Rachel! and thanks for the challenge Ether! |
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I tried a quick and dirty analytic geometry solution during lunch (essentially equivalent to Rachel's solution), and made some algebraic mistakes. I'm convinced there's a far more elegant geometric solution. Along this line (and admittedly working from the known answer), I have worked backwards through Heron's formula for the area of a triangle and shown that the area of the vertically aligned rectangle bounded by the centers of the two circles is the ratio of the base to the hypotenuse, when the length of the diagonal of that rectangle is defined as unity. This is just too pat an answer not to have a geometric meaning.
Here's the simplified calculations showing that to be the case: If you let the radius of the small circle be a, then the radius of the large circle is Ka. The hypotenuse of the tinted rectangle is obviously a(K+1). As this is defined to be length 1, we have that a=1/(K+1). We can easily see that the base is a(K-1), or (K-1)/(K+1). The height can be calculated from the Pythagorean theorem to be 2√K/(K+1). Finally, the area of the rectangle is 2√K(K-1)/(K+1)2, which matches the ratio of base to hypotenuse of the large triangle. OBTW: image of this rectangle has been posted, and will be linked when available. Edit: link Though when I awoke this morning I realized that the area of the rectangle was simply sinθ/2 cosθ/2, so I missed by a factor of two and a reciprocal in any case. :sigh: |
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Here's a solution which involves no trigonometry, and no Cartesian geometry. Just simple geometry and some algebra. It is considerably messier than the trig solution posted earlier. |
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While nibbling on lo mein leftovers at dinner this evening, I finally found a reasonably geometric solution (does not explicitly use double angle formula). It only needs the pythagorean theorem, similar triangles theorem, and some even more basic theorems. Oh - and an isosceles triangle theorem, that if two angles of a triangle have the same value, the sides opposite have the same length.
Note that "long leg" and "short leg" are based on the diagram as presented. In order for the diagram to appear as presented, the apex angle must be acute, implying that the angles labeled φ have a span of less than 45° so this is not an ambiguous definition.
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I had actually been rather close to my solution much earlier, but failed to notice that triangle was of the isoceles clan; that was the key. |
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I really like Gus' lo mein approach which eliminates the quadratic equation. I changed the proof slightly (congruent triangles instead of isosceles) and added color-coded figures to make the proof easier to follow. |
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Ether,
Thanks for the cleanup. I realized during the writeup that I should have labeled some points, but I had already posted the picture. I also see now what you mean by your no-trig solution being messy. I was wondering why you didn't do the algebra, then when I tried to solve for DB, I saw why. When I realized that the formula for DB involved taking a square root of a polynomial beginning with 32K4, I really did cringe. Also, a quick review of geometric proofs of the double angle formula shows that many of them involve an isoceles triangle either explicitly or implicitly. A rather neat one simply involves calculating the area of an isoceles triangle twice (using different sides as the base in each case), and setting the two answers equal to each other. |
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