Entry tags:
geometry puzzle
You're being too productive; let me help:
World's hardest easy geometry problem, forwarded by a coworker, allegedly solvable with pure geometry (no trigonometry).
World's hardest easy geometry problem, forwarded by a coworker, allegedly solvable with pure geometry (no trigonometry).
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Step 1: Draw a diagram.
Step 2: Cross it out and draw a BIGGER diagram.
...
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4) Try not to be grumpy when your friend studying free market economics makes a killing on paper and writing supplies.
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I've derived lots of additional factoids, but they have not yet led to a solution. I'm trying to figure out how to set up the multi-variable system of equations. :-)
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I'm pretty sure that's not elementary geometry.
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That's where I found myself, too.
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"If 5 cats can catch 5 mice in 5 minutes, then how many cats are needed to catch 100 mice in 100 minutes?" The triangle one was towards the end of the semester, I spent several weeks at it. Hint: Extend line DE down to match AB.
-- Dagonell
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(okay, I admit that I made an intelligent guess at that point rather than solving them, but I got a correct answer... and it should be solvable via algebra. I'm just lazy.)
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(Not saying that either the wife or I have solved it, but still...)
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I do admit to looking at the equations, thinking "this feels right", and just trying a number for one of those four angles.
As well as the sum of the angles in a triangle trick, you need the sum of angles coming off of a line trick (ie one line, several lines emerging from a single point on that line, the sum of those angles is 180°).