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AIME 2015 I · 第 15 题

AIME 2015 I — Problem 15

专题
Contest Math
难度
L4
来源
AIME

题目详情

Problem

A block of wood has the shape of a right circular cylinder with radius 66 and height 88, and its entire surface has been painted blue. Points AA and BB are chosen on the edge of one of the circular faces of the cylinder so that \overarcAB\overarc{AB} on that face measures 120120^\circ. The block is then sliced in half along the plane that passes through point AA, point BB, and the center of the cylinder, revealing a flat, unpainted face on each half. The area of one of these unpainted faces is aπ+bca\cdot\pi + b\sqrt{c}, where aa, bb, and cc are integers and cc is not divisible by the square of any prime. Find a+b+ca+b+c.

AIME diagram

--Credit to Royalreter1 and chezbgone2 For The Diagram--

解析

Solution 1

AIME diagram

Label the points where the plane intersects the top face of the cylinder as CC and DD, and the center of the cylinder as OO, such that C,O,C,O, and AA are collinear. Let NN be the center of the bottom face, and MM the midpoint of AB\overline{AB}. Then ON=4ON=4, MN=3MN=3 (because of the 120 degree angle), and so OM=5OM=5.

Project CC and DD onto the bottom face to get XX and YY, respectively. Then the section ABCDABCD (whose area we need to find), is a stretching of the section ABXYABXY on the bottom face. The ratio of stretching is OMMN=53\frac{OM}{MN}=\frac{5}{3}, and we do not square this value when finding the area because it is only stretching in one direction*. Using 30-60-90 triangles and circular sectors, we find that the area of the section ABXYABXY is 183 +12π18\sqrt{3}\ + 12 \pi. Thus, the area of section ABCDABCD is 20π+30320\pi + 30\sqrt{3}, and so our answer is 20+30+3=05320+30+3=\boxed{053}.

*Easier way to think of scale

Notice that we only scale one sector, particularly CD=ABCD = AB by 11 from BCBC' and ADAD' (or AYAY and BXBX). The scale between the remaining curvatures are of the factor 53\frac{5}{3}. The area of the smaller figure is 183+12π18\sqrt{3} + 12\cdot \pi, and the area of the desired figure is the area of the smaller figure times both scale factors, or (183+12π)(531)(18\sqrt{3} + 12\cdot \pi) \cdot (\frac{5}{3} \cdot 1), giving the requested result.

~Pinotation

Solution 2

Label the points same as in the first sentence above. Consider a view of the cylinder such that height is disregarded, i.e. a top view. From this view, note that Cylinder OO has become a circle with \overarcAB\overarc{AB} = \overarcCD\overarc{CD} = 120o120^\text{o}. Using 30-60-90 triangles, we get rectangle ABCDABCD to have a horizontal component of 66. Now, consider a side view, such that AA and BB coincide at the bottom of the diagram. From this view, consider the right triangle composed of hypotenuse ADAD and a point along the base of the viewpoint, which will be labeled as EE. From the top view, AE=6AE = 6. Because of the height of the cylinder, DEDE is equal to 88. This makes ADAD equal to 1010.

Now, the use of simple calculus is required. Conceptualize an infinite number of lines perpendicular to AEAE intersecting both AEAE and ADAD. Consider the area between point AA and the first vertical line. Label the point where the line intersects AE as E', and the point where the line intersects AD as D'. The area of the part of the initial unpainted face within these two positions approaches a rectangle with length AD' and width ww. The area of the base within these two positions approaches a rectangle with length AE' and width ww. The ratio of AD':AE' is 10:6, since the ratio of AD:AE is 10:6. This means that the area of the initial unpainted surface within these two positions to the area of the base within these two positions is equal to 10ww:6ww = 10:6. Through a similar argument, the areas between each set of vertical lines also maintains a ratio of 10:6. Therefore, the ratio of the area we wish to find to the area of the base between AB and CD (from the top perspective) is 10:6. Using 30-60-90 triangles and partial circles, the area of the base between AB and CD is calculated to be 183 +12π18\sqrt{3}\ + 12 \pi. The area of the unpainted surface therefore becomes 20π+30320\pi + 30\sqrt{3}, and so our answer is 053\boxed{053}.

Solution 3

This problem can be calculus-bashed (for those like me who never noticed the surface was merely a stretch of its projection). Label points as in the first paragraph of Solution 1 (AA and BB as given, MM the midpoint of ABAB, OO the center of the cylinder, TT the center of the bottom face of the cylinder). Because of the 120 degrees and right triangle calculations, we find MTMT = 3, OTOT = 4, OMOM = 5). We will be integrating with respect to the y-coordinate which we define as distance downwards from OO (in this system, the yy-coordinate of the bottom face would be 4).

We note that by similar triangles, we have that the length from OO to the point on the unpainted surface of coordinate yy is =54y\ell = \frac{5}{4} y, and therefore d=54dyd\ell = \frac{5}{4} dy. Define the segment ABA'B' to be the intersection of the painted surface with the circular cross section of the cylinder of coordinate yy, with endpoints AA' and BB' and midpoint MM', with TT' the center of this circular cross section. Then, by similar triangles, TM=34yT'M' = \frac{3}{4} y and thus

AB=2AM=262(34y)2=3264y2A'B' = 2A' M' = 2 \sqrt{ 6^2 - \left( \frac{3}{4}y\right)^2 } = \frac{3}{2} \sqrt{ 64 - y^2 } . We know that ABA'B' is perpendicular to OMOM.

Now we can set up our integral: we will integrate yy from 0 to 4 and multiply by two because the total height is 8.

A=204(3264y2)(54dy)A = 2\int_0^4 \left(\frac{3}{2}\sqrt{ 64 - y^2 }\right) \left( \frac{5}{4} dy\right) A=1540464y2dyA = \frac{15}{4} \int_0^4 \sqrt{ 64 - y^2 }dy Then we substitute y=8sinθy = 8\sin \theta with dy=8cosθdθdy = 8 \cos \theta d \theta, changing the bounds to 0 to π6\frac{\pi}{6} as appropriate.

A=1540π66464sin2θ8cosθdθA = \frac{15}{4} \int_0^\frac{\pi}{6} \sqrt{ 64 - 64\sin^2 \theta }\cdot 8\cos\theta d\theta A=2400π6cos2θdθA = 240 \int_0^\frac{\pi}{6} \cos^2 \theta d\theta A=240[θ2+sin2θ4]0π6=240[π12+38]=20π+303A = 240 \left[ \frac{\theta}{2} + \frac{\sin 2\theta}{4} \right]_0^\frac{\pi}{6} = 240 \left[ \frac{\pi}{12} + \frac{\sqrt{3}}{8} \right] = 20{\pi} + 30\sqrt{3} Therefore, a+b+c=20+30+3=053a + b + c = 20 + 30 + 3 = \boxed{053}.

Solution 4 - Author : Shiva Kumar Kannan - In Progress

Extend the cylinder such that the cylinder has a height of 1616 and the same radius of 66. Let QQ be a point on the circumference of the top face of the cylinder. Let RR be a point on the bottom face of the cylinder, and the farthest point from A on the cylinder. Let a plane PP pass through points QQ and RR. The cross section formed by the intersection of the plane and this stretched cylinder, is an ellipse. Notice that the cross section area we want to find is a part the part of this ellipse contained in the original cylinder.

The semi-major axis length of the ellipse is

62+82=10\sqrt{6^2 + 8^2} = 10 . The semiminor axis length is just the radius of the cylinder, which is 66.

If we take the plane of this ellipse to be the 22 dimensional Cartesian plane and take the center of this ellipse as (0,0)(0, 0), this ellipse has the equation :

x2102+y262=1\frac{x^2}{10^2} + \frac{y^2}{6^2} = 1 .

Notice that the cross section area we want to find is the area bounded by this ellipse from x=5x = -5 to x=5x = 5. Thus we must integrate the equation of the ellipse from 5-5 to 55. That will give us the positive area bounded by the ellipse and the xx axis. We want to double it, as we want both the positive and negative area as that is our cross section.

Rewrite the ellispe equation as

y=35100x2y = \frac{3}{5} \sqrt{100 - x^2} . We want to find

255(35100x2)(dx)2\int_{-5}^{5} \left(\frac{3}{5}\sqrt{100 - x^2 }\right) \left( dx\right) .

Evaluate this integral : It comes out to be

20π+30320\pi + 30\sqrt{3} . Finally, the answer we give, is

20+30+3=05320 + 30 + 3 = \boxed{053} .

Motivation : Notice that a cross section of any diagonal plane not going through the top or bottom face of the cylinder is an ellipse. When the plane does cross the bottom and top faces, the resulting cross section will be a portion of an ellipse. When the plane is perpendicular to its top and bottom faces, the resulting cross section is a rectangle. So, from the moment the cross section starts cutting both circular faces, to the moment it is perpendicular to the circular bases, it goes from a full ellipse, to a rectangle. Hence, the cross section we want is a part of the ellipse.

Video Solution

2015 AIME I #15

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