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Sixty Degree Decision (Posted on 2016-08-11) |
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For triangle PQR it is known that:
|PQ|*|PR| =8*R*r, where R and r are respectively the circumradius and the inradius of triangle PQR.
Can ∠QPR be ≥ 60o?
If so, give an example.
If not, prove it.
Solution
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Comment 1 of 1
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Let
PQ, QR and RP have lengths a, b, c respectively.
Area of triangle = (r/2)(a + b + c) = (1/2)PQ*PR*sin/QPR
therefore r(a + b + c) = 8Rr*sin/QPR
a + b + c =
4(2R*sin/QPR) = 4b
which gives a + c = 3b (1)
Using the cosine rule: cos/QPR
= (a2 + c2 – b2)/(2ac)
Now using (1) cos/QPR = (a2
+ c2 – (a2 + c2 + 2ac)/9)/(2ac)
= (8/9)(a2 + c2)/(2ac) –
1/9
The minimum value of (a2 + c2)/(2ac) is 1 when a = c,
so the minimum value of cos/QPR
is 7/9, giving a maximum
value of /QPR of cos-1(7/9) ~ 38.94
degrees.
So /QPR < 60 degrees.
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Posted by Harry
on 2016-08-12 06:52:22 |
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