Japan Math Olympiad | A Very Nice Geometry Challenge

Japan Math Olympiad | A Very Nice Geometry Problem
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Пікірлер: 18

  • @michaelkouzmin281
    @michaelkouzmin2814 күн бұрын

    Just some analytical geometry: 1. Let A(0;0); r= radius of the large outer semicircle; 2. equation of the circle with center Q: (x-6)^2+(y-3)^2 = 3^2; it is intersected by QC which equation is y=3 in point C; (x-6)^2+(3-3)^2=3^2; x-6 = 3; => x=9 => C(9;3) 3. Equation of the large outer semicircle is: (x-r)^2+y^2=r^2; as it passes through C(9;3): (9-r)^2+3^2=r^2; 81-18*r+r^2+9=r^2; 90=18*r; r=5. 4. Ared = pi*5^2/2 - pi*2^2/2 - pi*3^2/2 = 12*pi/2=6*pi sq units.

  • @quigonkenny
    @quigonkenny6 күн бұрын

    Let O be the center of the largest, outer semicircle, P be the center of the larger inner semicircle, and Q be the center of the smaller inner semicircle. Let A (left) and B (right) be the ends of the diameter of semicircle O, C (left) and D (right) be the ends of the diameter of semicircle P, and E be the remaining end of the diameter of semicircle Q. Let T be the point of tangency between the two inner semicircles, and S be the point of tangency between the circumference of semicircle P and AB. Let R be the radius of semicircle O, as the other two radii are given. Draw PQ. When two circles are tangent to each other, their point of tangency is collinear with their centers. Thus PQ passes through T. As PT = 3 and QT = 2, PQ = 3+2 = 5. AB is tangent to semicircle P at S, so ∠ASP = 90°. As PS = 3 and PQ = 5, then ∆QSP is a 3-4-5 Pythagorean triple right triangle and QS = 4. Draw DM, where M is the point on AB where DM is perpendicular to AB, and draw AD. By observation, AM = AQ+ QS+ SM = 2+4+3 = 9, and DM = PS = 3. Triangle ∆AMD: DM² + AM² = AD² 3² + 9² = AD² AD² = 9 + 81 = 90 AD = √90 = 3√10 Draw DB. By Thales' Theorem, ∠BDA = 90°, as A and B are ends of a diameter and D is on the circumference. As ∠AMD also equals 90° and ∠DAM is common, triangles ∆AMD and ∆BDA are similar. Triangle ∆BDA: AB/AD = AD/AM 2R/3√10 = 3√10/9 18R = 90 R = 90/18 = 5 The red shaded area is equal to the area of semicircle O minus the areas of semicircles P and Q. Red shaded area: A = πR²/2 - π3²/2 - π2²/2 A = 25π/2 - 9π/2 - 4π/2 = 12π/2 = 6π sq units

  • @rabotaakk-nw9nm
    @rabotaakk-nw9nm4 күн бұрын

    CD=DM=MQ=3; PQ=2+3=5 ΔPMQ - right triangle (3/4/5) => PM=4 AD=2+4+3=9; BD=AB-AD=2R-9 ΔACB - right triangle => CD²=AD•BD 9(2R-9)=3²; 18R-81=9; 18R=90; R=5 A=½π5²-½π2²-½π3²=½π12=6π 😁

  • @bpark10001
    @bpark100012 күн бұрын

    You don't need chord theory to get X. Construct lines AC & CB. ACB is right triangle & is similar to triangle ADC. AD/DA = 3 = BD/CD. BD = X =1. From there you have diameter AB of the large circle & the areas can be calculated.

  • @303wal
    @303wal5 күн бұрын

    Draw a point O on line AB (which is a diameter of the large circle) 3 units to the right of P. Draw a line from O to C. Then PQCOP is a parallelogram and AO and OC are both 5 units long, so both are radial lines and O is the center of the large circle. Then area of shaded area is half of 25*pi - 9*pi - 4*pi.

  • @hongningsuen1348

    @hongningsuen1348

    5 күн бұрын

    Wonderful use of parallelogram.

  • @imetroangola4943
    @imetroangola49436 күн бұрын

    Parabéns pelos excelentes vídeos e pelas ótimas soluções!

  • @RealQinnMalloryu4
    @RealQinnMalloryu45 күн бұрын

    (2)^2=4 (3)^2=9 {4+9}=:13 180°PM/13=10PM.50 2^5PM.5^10 1^1PM.1^2^5 2^1 (p ➖ 2m+1)

  • @Buy_YT_Views.792
    @Buy_YT_Views.7925 күн бұрын

    Imagine having this on a big screen. Movie night goals!

  • @michaeldoerr5810
    @michaeldoerr58105 күн бұрын

    Another easier than it looks problem and it shows that before calculating the area of a semicircle always check if the diameter is given. If not, then use two circle theorems and chord lengths.

  • @holyshit922
    @holyshit9226 күн бұрын

    6:33 and how this can be proven At first look I thought about similar triangles and probably it is not a bad idea (To justify that we have similar triangles we have to identify inscribed agles subtended by the same arc)

  • @giuseppemalaguti435
    @giuseppemalaguti4356 күн бұрын

    In un sistema cartesiano opportuno(O è il centro del grande cerchio),il punto C=((R-3)^2/(6-R),3)...quindi imposto l'equazione ((R-3)^4/(6-R)^2)+9=R^2...semplifico e rimane R^2-8R+15=0, dà soluzioni R=5,R=3..per cui è certamente R=5..a questo punto procedo per differenza delle aree

  • @JobBouwman
    @JobBouwman6 күн бұрын

    (2+4+3)*x = 3^2, so x = 1 and the diameter = (2 +4+ 3) + x = 10. So the area = pi(5^2 - 3^2 - 2^2)/2 = 6pi.

  • @Paweu240
    @Paweu2406 күн бұрын

    Real solution starts there 6:15

  • @sumanbasak3507
    @sumanbasak35075 күн бұрын

    Sir, I've solved the question in this way...😊

  • @haiduy7627
    @haiduy76276 күн бұрын

    ❤❤🎉🎉

  • @WolfgangManichl
    @WolfgangManichl5 күн бұрын

    What I see on Indian math channels is way beyond of what I see on German math channels. Up to 5;05: Piece of cake. As of 5:05: Never heard of this rule. Ever. Although it is intuitively correct, German schools do not teach this rule. My highest respect for India. Go on like this, and your kids will become engineers, who will soon take the lead on technological advance.

  • @jimlocke9320

    @jimlocke9320

    3 күн бұрын

    I am a retired electrical engineer who spent the majority of my career years in the so called Silicon Valley of California (San Jose and surrounding areas, including Cupertino, where Apple Computer has its headquarters). I worked with a number of Indian engineers, as well as engineers of other nationalities. We worked well together. There are some parts of a project where an Indian engineer would take the lead, but other parts where engineers of other nationalities took the lead. I never considered the Indians to be a threat, even if they outnumbered those of us born in the USA. Most likely, because the Indians are here, there are more engineering jobs for us natives, not fewer. As for the "intersecting chords" theorem at 5:05, I am surprised that you weren't taught it in Germany. My high school geometry classes focused on proofs. I find these problems far more interesting than proofs.