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Equilateral Triangle (Posted on 2003-12-18) Difficulty: 3 of 5
Suppose ABC is an equilateral triangle and P is a point inside the triangle, such that PA = 3 cms., PB = 4 cms., and PC = 5 cms.
Then find the length of the side of the equilateral triangle.

No Solution Yet Submitted by Ravi Raja    
Rating: 4.0000 (5 votes)

Comments: ( Back to comment list | You must be logged in to post comments.)
Solution re: Solution | Comment 18 of 21 |
(In reply to Solution by tom)

Here is the general case, based on tom's solution:

Let a=|PA|, b=|PB|, c=|PC|, and let s=|AB|=|BC|=|CA|.

Rotate ABC 60 degrees about A. This takes P to P', B to B'=C, and C to C'.

Now, AP=AP', and PAP' = 60 degrees, so triangle PAP' is equilateral with side length a. In particular, |PP'|=a. |P'C|=|P'B'|=|PB|=b, and |PC|=c. So triangle PP'C has sides of lengths a,b,c. Let K be the area of this triangle.

By the law of cosines,

s^2 = a^2 + b^2 - 2ab cos(AP'C).

Now, the angle AP'C = AP'P + PP'C = 60 + PP'C, so

cos(AP'C) = cos(60 + PP'C) = 1/2 cos(PP'C) + sqrt3/2 sin(PP'C).

But by the law of cosines again,

cos(PP'C) = [a^2 + b^2 - c^2]/(2ab),

and by the area formula,

sin(PP'C) = 2K/(ab).

Plugging in these values gives

s^2 = a^2 + b^2 - 2ab[ 1/2 [a^2 + b^2 - c^2]/(2ab) + sqrt3/2 [2K/(ab)] ]
= [a^2 + b^2 + c^2 + K*4sqrt 3]/2,

where again, K is the area of a triangle with side length a,b,c.

In our case a=3,b=4,c=5, and K=6, and we get s^2 = 25+12sqrt3.
  Posted by Eigenray on 2008-03-15 18:24:00

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