Kvant Math Problem 1351

Let the right angle of triangle $ABC$ be at $A$.

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Problem

Let $AB$ and $AC$ be the legs of a right triangle, with $AC\gt AB$. A point $E$ is chosen on $AC$, and a point $D$ on $BC$, so that $AB=AE=BD$. Prove that the triangle $ADE$ is right-angled if and only if the sides of the triangle $ABC$ are in the ratio $3:4:5$.

A. Parovyan

Tournament of Towns

Exploration

Let the right angle of triangle $ABC$ be at $A$. Put

$AB=b,\qquad AC=c,\qquad c>b.$

Since $AE=AB=b$, the point $E$ lies on $AC$ and

$CE=c-b.$

Since $BD=AB=b$, the point $D$ lies on $BC$ with

$\frac{BD}{BC}=\frac{b}{\sqrt{b^2+c^2}}.$

A coordinate model seems natural. Take

$A=(0,0),\qquad B=(b,0),\qquad C=(0,c).$

Then $E=(0,b)$.

The point $D$ divides $BC$ in the ratio $BD:BC=b:\sqrt{b^2+c^2}$, hence

$D=B+\frac{b}{\sqrt{b^2+c^2}}(C-B).$

Writing $s=\sqrt{b^2+c^2}$ gives

$D=\left(b-\frac{b^2}{s},,\frac{bc}{s}\right).$

The condition that $ADE$ be right-angled must now be translated into an algebraic equation. Since the right angle could occur at $A$, $D$, or $E$, all three possibilities must be checked.

At $A$ we would need $AD\perp AE$. Since $AE$ is vertical, this would force $D$ to lie on the $x$-axis, impossible because $D$ is an interior point of $BC$.

At $E$ we require

$\overrightarrow{EA}\cdot\overrightarrow{ED}=0.$

This gives $\frac{bc}{s}=b$, hence $c=s$, impossible.

Thus the only possible right angle is at $D$.

Computing

$\overrightarrow{DA}\cdot\overrightarrow{DE}=0$

produces a single equation in $b,c$. After simplification it becomes

$c^2=\frac{16}{9}b^2,$

which yields the ratio $3:4:5$.

The delicate point is the algebra leading from the orthogonality condition at $D$ to this ratio.

Problem Understanding

We are given a right triangle $ABC$ with legs $AB$ and $AC$, where $AC>AB$. Points $E\in AC$ and $D\in BC$ satisfy

$AB=AE=BD.$

We must prove that triangle $ADE$ is right-angled if and only if triangle $ABC$ has side lengths proportional to $3:4:5$.

This is a Type B problem. The statement itself is to be proved.

The core difficulty is identifying where the right angle of triangle $ADE$ can occur and converting that geometric condition into an equation relating the legs $AB$ and $AC$.

Proof Architecture

Let $b=AB$ and $c=AC$, and place the triangle in coordinates with $A=(0,0)$, $B=(b,0)$, $C=(0,c)$.

The first claim is that

$E=(0,b),\qquad D=\left(b-\frac{b^2}{s},,\frac{bc}{s}\right),\qquad s=\sqrt{b^2+c^2},$

because $AE=b$ and $BD=b$.

The second claim is that the right angle of triangle $ADE$ cannot be at $A$ or at $E$; this follows from direct orthogonality tests.

The third claim is that $ADE$ is right-angled exactly when

$\overrightarrow{DA}\cdot\overrightarrow{DE}=0,$

which simplifies to

$9c^2=16b^2.$

The final claim is that $9c^2=16b^2$ is equivalent to

$AB:AC:BC=3:4:5.$

The hardest direction is deriving the ratio from the orthogonality condition at $D$. That is the step most likely to fail under scrutiny.

Solution

Let

$AB=b,\qquad AC=c,\qquad c>b,$

and place the triangle in the coordinate plane by

$A=(0,0),\qquad B=(b,0),\qquad C=(0,c).$

Denote

$s=BC=\sqrt{b^2+c^2}.$

Since $AE=b$ and $E\in AC$,

$E=(0,b).$

Since $BD=b$ and $D\in BC$, the point $D$ divides the segment $BC$ in the ratio

$\frac{BD}{BC}=\frac{b}{s}.$

Hence

$$=\left(b-\frac{b^2}{s},,\frac{bc}{s}\right).$$

Assume first that triangle $ADE$ is right-angled.

We determine where its right angle can be.

If the right angle were at $A$, then $AD\perp AE$. Since $AE$ is the vertical line $x=0$, the line $AD$ would have to be horizontal. Thus the $y$-coordinate of $D$ would be $0$. But

$\frac{bc}{s}>0,$

a contradiction.

If the right angle were at $E$, then

$$$$

Now

$$$$

and

$$=\left(b-\frac{b^2}{s},,\frac{bc}{s}-b\right).$$

Therefore

$$=-b\left(\frac{bc}{s}-b\right).$$

The condition of orthogonality becomes

$$$$

hence $c=s$, impossible because

$$$$

Thus the right angle can only be at $D$.

Consequently,

$$$$

We have

$$=\left(-b+\frac{b^2}{s},-\frac{bc}{s}\right),$$

and

$$=\left(-b+\frac{b^2}{s},,b-\frac{bc}{s}\right).$$

Writing

$$$$

the orthogonality condition becomes

$$$$

Substituting $u=-b+b^2/s$ and multiplying by $s^2$ gives

$$$$

Since $b>0$,

$$$$

Expanding,

$$$$

Using $s^2=b^2+c^2$,

$$$$

Since $b^2+c^2=s^2$,

$$$$

Because $s>0$,

$$$$

Squaring,

$$$$

Hence

$$$$

so

$$$$

Since $c>0$,

$$$$

Therefore

$$$$

Then

$$=\sqrt{b^2+\frac{16}{9}b^2} =\frac53,b.$$

Thus

$$$$

This proves the necessity.

Conversely, suppose

$$$$

Write

$$$$

Then

$$=\left(\frac65k,\frac{12}5k\right),$$

and

$$$$

Therefore

$$=\left(-\frac65k,-\frac{12}5k\right),$$

and

$$=\left(-\frac65k,\frac35k\right).$$

Their dot product equals

$$+\left(-\frac{12}5k\right)\left(\frac35k\right) =\frac{36}{25}k^2-\frac{36}{25}k^2 =0.$$

Hence $DA\perp DE$, so triangle $ADE$ is right-angled.

We have proved both implications. This completes the proof.

Verification of Key Steps

The first delicate step is excluding a right angle at $E$. The orthogonality condition there is

$$=-b\left(\frac{bc}{s}-b\right)=0.$$

Since $b>0$, this yields $c=s$. Because

$$$$

we have $s>c$, so such a right angle is impossible. Any argument that merely compares lengths informally risks overlooking this strict inequality.

The second delicate step is simplifying

$$$$

Expanding and substituting $s^2=b^2+c^2$ gives

$$$$

Replacing $b^2+c^2$ by $s^2$ yields

$$$$

Since $s>0$, division by $s$ is legitimate and produces

$$$$

This is the exact point where positivity of $s$ is required.

The third delicate step is passing from

$$$$

to

$$$$

After expansion, one obtains

$$$$

Subtracting $c^2$ from both sides gives

$$$$

and dividing by $c>0$ yields

$$$$

No additional solutions are lost because $c$ is a side length.

Alternative Approaches

A synthetic solution can be built from Stewart's theorem or from ratios on the hypotenuse. Since

$$$$

the point $D$ is determined by the ratio $BD:DC$. Expressing $AD$ through Stewart's theorem and using $AE=AB$ makes triangle $ADE$ depend on a single parameter, namely $AC/AB$. Applying the Pythagorean condition in triangle $ADE$ then leads to the same equation $3c=4b$.

The coordinate method is preferable because the locations of $D$ and $E$ are explicit, the possible positions of the right angle are checked directly, and the condition $DA\perp DE$ converts immediately into a single algebraic relation whose simplification is straightforward.