Let ABC an isosceles triangle (AB=AC) and the bisector from B intersects AC at D such that AD+BD=BC. Find the angle A.

Amiya Melendez

Amiya Melendez

Answered question

2022-10-11

Find angle of isosceles triangle
Let ABC an isosceles triangle ( A B = A C) and the bisector from B intersects AC at D such that A D + B D = B C. Find the angle A.

Answer & Explanation

plomet6a

plomet6a

Beginner2022-10-12Added 20 answers

Step 1
Let E be placed on BC such that E C = A D.
Thus, B D = B C A D = B C E C = B E ,, which says B E C = 1 2 ( 180 D B C ) = 1 2 ( 180 45 + α ) = 67.5 + 1 2 α ..
Step 2
In another hand, since BD is a bisector of Δ A B C, we obtain:
E C A B = A D A B = D C B C and C is a common angle of Δ A B C and Δ E D C ..
Thus, Δ A B C Δ E D C ,, which gives D E C = 4 α.
Id est, 67.5 + 1 2 α + 4 α = 180 ,, which gives α = 25 and B A C = 4 25 = 100 ..
propappeale00

propappeale00

Beginner2022-10-13Added 5 answers

Step 1
First, let's see the angles
- A B D = 180 4 a 4 = 45 a.
- A D B = 180 4 a ( 45 a ) = 135 3 a.
- B D C = 180 ( 135 3 a ) = 45 + 3 a
- C = 90 2 a
From the theorem of sines in Δ A B D:
A D + B D A B = sin ( A B D ) + sin ( A ) sin ( A D B ) = sin ( 45 a ) + sin 4 a sin ( 45 + 3 a )
and from the theorem of sines in Δ A B C:
B C A B = sin ( A ) sin ( C ) = sin 4 a sin ( 90 2 a ) = sin 4 a cos 2 a = 2 sin 2 a cos 2 a cos 2 a = 2 sin 2 a
because the cos function is dephased from sin by 90 . Now from the hypothesis:
sin ( 45 a ) + sin 4 a sin ( 45 + 3 a ) = 2 sin 2 a
and this implies sin 4 a + sin ( 45 a ) = 2 sin 2 a sin ( 45 + 3 a ) or sin 4 a + cos ( 45 + a ) = cos ( 45 + a ) cos ( 45 + 5 a ) or sin 4 a = sin ( 5 a 45 ) and thus 4 a + 5 a 45 = 180 a = 25 . Which means A = 100

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