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AIME 2008 II · 第 13 题

AIME 2008 II — Problem 13

专题
Contest Math
难度
L4
来源
AIME

题目详情

Problem

A regular hexagon with center at the origin in the complex plane has opposite pairs of sides one unit apart. One pair of sides is parallel to the imaginary axis. Let RR be the region outside the hexagon, and let S={1zzR}S = \left\lbrace\frac{1}{z}|z \in R\right\rbrace. Then the area of SS has the form aπ+ba\pi + \sqrt{b}, where aa and bb are positive integers. Find a+ba + b.

解析

Solution 1

If you're familiar with inversion, you'll see that the problem's basically asking you to invert the hexagon with respect to the unit circle in the Cartesian Plane using the Inversion Distance Formula. This works because the point in the Cartesian Plane's complex plane equivalent switches places with its conjugate but we can do that in the Cartesian plane too (just reflect a point in the Cartesian plane over the x-axis)! If you're familiar with inversion you can go plot the inverted figure's Cartesian Plane Equivalent. Then simply continue on with the figure shown in the below solution.

Solution 2

If a point z=rcisθz = r\text{cis}\,\theta is in RR, then the point 1z=1rcis(θ)\frac{1}{z} = \frac{1}{r} \text{cis}\, \left(-\theta\right) is in SS (where cis denotes cisθ=cosθ+isinθ\text{cis}\, \theta = \cos \theta + i \sin \theta). Since RR is symmetric every 6060^{\circ} about the origin, it suffices to consider the area of the result of the transformation when 30θ30-30 \le \theta \le 30, and then to multiply by 66 to account for the entire area.

We note that if the region S2={1zzR2}S_2 = \left\lbrace\frac{1}{z}|z \in R_2\right\rbrace, where R2R_2 is the region (in green below) outside the circle of radius 1/31/\sqrt{3} centered at the origin, then S2S_2 is simply the region inside a circle of radius 3\sqrt{3} centered at the origin. It now suffices to find what happens to the mapping of the region RR2R-R_2 (in blue below).

The equation of the hexagon side in that region is x=rcosθ=12x = r \cos \theta = \frac{1}{2}, which is transformed to 1rcos(θ)=1rcosθ=\frac{1}{r} \cos (-\theta) = \frac{1}{r} \cos \theta =2 . Let rcisθ=a+bir\text{cis}\,\theta = a+bi where a,bRa,b \in \mathbb{R}; then r=a2+b2,cosθ=aa2+b2r = \sqrt{a^2 + b^2}, \cos \theta = \frac{a}{\sqrt{a^2 + b^2}}, so the equation becomes a22a+b2=0(a1)2+b2=1a^2 - 2a + b^2 = 0 \Longrightarrow (a-1)^2 + b^2 = 1. Hence the side is sent to an arc of the unit circle centered at (1,0)(1,0), after considering the restriction that the side of the hexagon is a segment of length 1/31/\sqrt{3}.

Including S2S_2, we find that SS is the union of six unit circles centered at ciskπ6\text{cis}\, \frac{k\pi}{6}, k=0,1,2,3,4,5k = 0,1,2,3,4,5, as shown below.

AIME diagram

\Longrightarrow

AIME diagram

The area of the regular hexagon is 6((3)234)=9236 \cdot \left( \frac{\left(\sqrt{3}\right)^2 \sqrt{3}}{4} \right) = \frac{9}{2}\sqrt{3}. The total area of the six 120120^{\circ} sectors is 6(13π12123)=2π3236\left(\frac{1}{3}\pi - \frac{1}{2} \cdot \frac{1}{2} \cdot \sqrt{3}\right) = 2\pi - \frac{3}{2}\sqrt{3}. Their sum is 2π+272\pi + \sqrt{27}, and a+b=029a+b = \boxed{029}. - Th3Numb3rThr33

Solution 3 (Calculus)

We can describe the line parallel to the imaginary axis x=12x=\frac{1}{2} using polar coordinates as r(θ)=12cosθ,r(\theta)=\dfrac{1}{2\cos{\theta}},

which rearranges to z=(12cosθ)(cisθ)    1z=2cosθcis(θ).z=\left(\dfrac{1}{2\cos{\theta}}\right)(cis{\theta})\implies \frac{1}{z}=2\cos{\theta}cis(-\theta).

Denote the area of SS as [S].[S]. Now, dividing the hexagon to 12 equal parts, we have the following integral:

[S]=120π612r2dθ=120π612(2cosθ)2dθ.[S] = 12\int_{0}^{\frac{\pi}{6}}\frac{1}{2}r^2 d\theta = 12\int_{0}^{\frac{\pi}{6}}\frac{1}{2}(2\cos\theta)^2 d\theta.

Thankfully, this is a routine computation:

[S]=120π62(cosθ)2dθ=120π6(cos2θ+1)dθ[S] = 12\int_{0}^{\frac{\pi}{6}}2(\cos\theta)^2 d\theta = 12\int_{0}^{\frac{\pi}{6}}(\cos{2\theta}+1)d\theta [S]=120π6(cos2θ+1)dθ=12[12sin2θ+θ]0π6=12(34+π6)=2π+33=2π+27[S] = 12\int_{0}^{\frac{\pi}{6}}(\cos{2\theta}+1)d\theta = 12\left[\frac{1}{2}\sin{2\theta}+\theta\right]_0^{\frac{\pi}{6}}=12\left(\frac{\sqrt{3}}{4}+\frac{\pi}{6}\right)=2\pi+3\sqrt{3}=2\pi + \sqrt{27}

a+b=029a+b = \boxed{029}.

Video Solution

2008 AIME II #13

MathProblemSolvingSkills.com