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On Target (Posted on 2006-10-09) Difficulty: 4 of 5
At the beginning of the exercise, three soldiers, named Ike, Jay and Kay, were at three different points equidistant from a target. Ike was 4 kilometers from Jay, and also 4 kilometers from Kay.

Then Jay started moving inward, directly toward the target. He stopped short of the target, at a point different from his original location, but again 4 kilometers from Ike.

At this point the distances between any two of Ike, Jay, Kay and the target were all whole numbers of kilometers.

In his new position, how far is Jay from Kay?

  Submitted by Charlie    
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The target is at T. Ike, Jay and Kay start out at I, J and K. Ike and Kay remain at their respective locations, but Jay moves to J'.

Since they all start equidistant from T, I, J and K are on a circle of unspecified radius centered on T. I is at the center of a circle of radius 4 km, whose intersections with the first circle mark the points J and K.

Triangles JTI and ITK are congruent isosceles triangles with base 4 km and sides 8 km. Triangle IJJ' shares a base angle with IJT at point (and angle) J, and so is similar. Side TK has to be an integer, and thus TI and TJ also, as the equal sides of two congruent isosceles triangles. Thus, for TJ' to be an integer as required, JJ' must be an integer. JI, at length 4 is the base of the larger triangle, JTI, and a side of the smaller triangle, JIJ', so IT/4 = 4/JJ', or (IT)=16/(JJ').

If IT were 1, then the circle around T would not intersect the 4 km circle around I. If IT were 2, J and K would have been at the same position initially. If IT were 4, Jay would have reached the target (J' located at T), but he is said to have stopped short of it.

With IT = 8 and JJ' = 2, isosceles triangle J'JI has base 2, and so consists of two back-to-back right triangles with leg 1 and hypotenuse 4, so angle J'JI (aka TJI) has measure arccos(1/4). Angle JTI, the apex of one of the large isosceles triangles, then has measure 180 degrees - 2 arccos(1/4). The two large isosceles triangles together, JTI and ITK, at apex T, form angle JTK with measure 360 deg - 4 arccos(1/4).

Then using the law of cosines in triangle J'TK, (J'K)^2 = 6^2 + 8^2 - 2*6*8*cos(4 arccos(1/4)), as cos(360-x) = cos x.

Since cos(4a) = 8 cos^4(a) - 8 cos^2(a) + 1,

4 arccos(1/4) = 8/256 - 8/16 + 1 = 17/32

So (J'K)^2 = 6^2 + 8^2 - 2*6*8*17/32 = 49, and

J'K = 7 km.

From New Scientist, 16 September 2006, p.23, Enigma number 1409.

Comments: ( You must be logged in to post comments.)
  Subject Author Date
Some ThoughtsPuzzle ThoughtsK Sengupta2023-03-17 23:06:22
Some Thoughtsre: correction made to problemBractals2006-10-10 11:27:30
correction made to problemCharlie2006-10-10 09:25:28
SolutionSolutionBractals2006-10-09 20:59:54
SolutionEric2006-10-09 19:40:48
SolutionSolution (sort of)Joel2006-10-09 17:37:49
More information?Gamer2006-10-09 17:28:54
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