Prove that angle bisectors of a triangle are concurrent using vectors. Also, find the position vecto

Sarai Davenport

Sarai Davenport

Answered question

2022-06-20

Prove that angle bisectors of a triangle are concurrent using vectors. Also, find the position vector of the point of concurrency in terms of position vectors of the vertices.

I solved this without using vectors to get some idea. I am not sure how to prove it using vectors. I don't want to use vector equations for straight lines and then find the point of concurrency. That's like solving using coordinate geometry.

Let a , b , c represent the sides A , B , C respectively.

The angle bisectors are along a | a | + b | b | , b | b | + c | c | , c | c | + a | a |

Let the sides A B , B C , C A be x , y , z. Let A D be one of the angular bisector.
B D C D = x z
Hence
D = x c + z b x + z
What should be the next step? Or is there a better method?

Answer & Explanation

Tianna Deleon

Tianna Deleon

Beginner2022-06-21Added 29 answers

You just need to apply the Angle Bisector Theorem again. For completeness, I'll go through the whole argument.

Given A B C with side-lengths a = | B C | , b = | C A | , c := | A B | , suppose the angle bisector from A meets the opposite side at D. You're correct that, by the Angle Bisector Theorem
( ) | B D | | D C | = | A B | | A C | = c b
so that we can write:
D = B b + C c b + c
Note also that ( ) implies
| B D | | B C | = c b + c so that | B D | = | B C | c b + c = a c b + c
Now, here's your next step: Suppose the angle bisector from B meets A D ¯ at X (which we "know" is the incenter). Again by the Angle Bisector Theorem applied to A B D,
| A X | | X D | = | B A | | B D | = c a c / ( b + c ) = b + c a
and we can write
X = A a + D ( b + c ) a + b + c = A a + B b + C c a + b + c
Because this formula is symmetric in the elements of A B C, we conclude that X is not merely where the angle bisector from A meets the angle bisector from B, but where any two angle bisectors meet ... and, therefore, where all three bisectors meet (aka, the incenter).

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