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Three Line Segment Sum (Posted on 2014-05-31) |
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Let A, B, and C be circles with equal radii and tangent externally pairwise.
Let O be the circle tangent externally to A, B, and C and P any point on O.
For X∈{A,B,C}, let X' be one of the two points on X such that line PX' is
tangent to X and let x = |PX'|.
Prove that (a+b-c)(b+c-a)(c+a-b) = 0.
Trig approach
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| Comment 1 of 2
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Let
the centres of circles A and O be points D and E, and
their radii be r and R respectively. Denote angle PED by QA.
The cosine rule in triangle PED and Pythagoras in PAD
give: a2 = |PD|2 –
r2
=
R2 + (R – r)2 - 2R(R – r)cos(QA) – r2
= 2R(R – r)(1 – cos(QA))
= 4R(R – r) sin2(QA/2)
Thus a = k sin(QA/2) where k2 = 4R(R – r)
By similar reasoning, b = k sin(QB/2) and c = k sin(QC/2)
where QA, QB and QC are angles subtended at
the centre of O
by arcs extending from P to the tangent points of O with A, B
and C respectively.
If P lies on the minor arc between contacts with A and B
then QB = 120o –
QA and QC
= 240o – QA which give
c - b =
k(sin(120o – QA/2)
- sin(60o – QA/2))
= 2k(cos(90o – QA/2)sin(30o))
= k sin(QA/2) = a, giving
a + b – c = 0 .
By cycling a, b, c, it follows that whichever arc P lies on, one
of the three factors will be zero giving
((a + b – c)(b + c – a)(c + a –
b) = 0
By now the reader will be as convinced as I am that geometry
would provide a better proof! We look to Bractals for closure.
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Posted by Harry
on 2014-06-07 12:32:40 |
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