Golden Ratio and Right Triangles - when geometry meets number theory

Join Trial or Access Free Resources

The golden ratio is arguably the third most interesting number in mathematics. The first two slots are of course reserved for ( \pi ) and ( e ). Among other things, golden ratio has the uncanny habit of appearing unexpectedly in nature and geometry.

What is golden ratio?

There is a number which is exactly one more than its reciprocal. (It helps to recall this ‘worded’ definiton of golden ratio). Formally speaking, let ( x ) be a positive real number such that ( x = 1 + \frac {1}{x} ).

Simplifying we get the quadrartic equation ( x^2 - x -1 =0 ). Solving it we have (a positive solution) $$ x = \frac  {1+\sqrt{5}}{2} $$.

The quadratic equation has another solution: ( \frac {1 - \sqrt {5} }{2} ). This is approximately -0.618. It is not considered to be the right golden ratio for several reasons (and possibly we will discuss them in another post).

Also See

Advanced Math Olympiad Program

A Problem from Geometry

Given a right triangle ABC with <ACB =90.  Let CH, H lying on AB, be the altitude to AB and P and Q be the tangent points of the incircle of triangle ABC to AC and BC. If AQ is perpendicular to HP, find the ratio of AH to BH.

Discussion

Golden Ratio mysteriously appears in this problem. In fact, that is the answer. $$ \frac {AH}{BH} = \frac  {1+\sqrt{5}}{2} $$

How to go about this solution? As usual, we will indicate a sequence of hints. The reader is advised to try on his / her own.

Hint 1 : Draw a picture (huh! this is a no-brainer)

Golden Ratio

Hint 1A: Do some useless(?) angle chasing!

A little investigation reveals PDIQC is a cyclic pentagon where I is the incenter. This won’t be used in the ‘solution’ but is a fun fact to explore. In fact there are a bunch of cyclic quadrilaterals in this picture.

Try to explore the radical center and the radical axis. Lazily invert lines across some circle. Waste some more time in performing your favorite geometric transformations.

The bottom line is remember to have some serious fun. 

Hint 2: Use coordinates

Suppose C = (0,0), A = (0, a) and B = (b, 0). Then the equation of the line AB is ( y = \frac{-a}{b} x + a ). Since slopes of perpendicular lines are negative reciprocals of each other, hence slope of CH is (\frac{b}{a}).

Its y-intercept is 0.

Hence equation of CH is ( y = \frac {b}{a}x ).

Solve the equation of AB and CH to get the coordinate of H.

$$ x = \frac{a^2 b }{a^2 + b^2} \ y = \frac {ab^2}{a^2 + b^2} $$

Finally compute AH and BH using distance formula to find (after a lot of algebraic jugglery) $$ \frac {AH}{BH} = \frac{a^2}{b^2} $$

Hint 2A: Get bored by coordinates (find AH/BH without coordinates)

Notice that ( \Delta ACH \tilde \Delta BCH) . If you do not know why this is true, try to prove this before proceeding. It is a super important geometric fact.

This immediately tells you the following: $$ \frac{AC}{BC} = \frac {AH}{CH} \ \frac {AC}{BC} = \frac {CH}{BH} $$

Multiplying these two equations we have $$ \frac {AC^2}{BC^2} = \frac {AH}{BH} = \frac{a^2}{b^2} $$

Voila!

Hint 3: Find inradius to compute coordinates of P and Q.

Note that if I is the incenter, then IP and IQ are both equal to the inradius r. The coordinate of Q is (r, 0) and coordinate of P is (0, r).

How to compute the inradius? There are multiple ways. One way is to use the following formula: $$ \Delta = s \times r $$

Here ( \Delta ) = area of triangle, s= semiperimeter, r = inradius. (If you do not know this formula, look into any standard Geometry book such as Challenges and Thrills of Pre-College Mathematics. The proof is simple.)

Area of the right triangle is ( \frac{ab}{2} ). Semiperimeter = ( \frac {a+b+ \sqrt{a^2 + b^2} }{2} )

Hint 4: Slopes of HP and AQ multiply to -1

We know the coordinates of P, H, A and Q. They are: $$ P = \left ( 0, \frac{ab}{a+b +\sqrt{a^2 + b^2 }}  \right ) \ H = \left ( \frac{a^2b}{a^2+b^2} , \frac{ab^2}{a^2 + b^2} \right ) \ A = (a, 0) \ Q = \left ( 0, \frac{ab}{a+b +\sqrt{a^2 + b^2 }}  \right ) $$

Compute the slopes of HP and AQ: $$ Slope_{HP} = \frac {ab + b \sqrt{a^2+b^2} - a^2 }{a(a+b+ \sqrt{a^2 + b^2})} \ Slope_{AQ} = - \frac {a+b + \sqrt {a^2 +b^2}} {b} $$.

The problem stipulates that these two lines are perpendicular. Hence product of their slope is -1. Deduce from this that $$ 1 + \frac{b^2}{a^2} = \frac {a^2}{b^2} $$

Hint 5: Find \( \frac {a^2 }{b^2} \)

In the equation of the last hint, substitute ( \frac {a^2} {b^2} = t ). This leads to the quadratic equation $$ t^2 - t - 1 = 0 $$

Solving (using quadratic formula) we have (ignoring the negative solution) $$ t = \frac {a^2}{b^2} = \frac {1 + \sqrt{5}}{2} $$

Key ideas

  • The formula connecting inradius and area.
  • Slopes of perpendicular lines are negative reciprocals
  • Perpendicular dropped from vertex to hypotenuse in a right triangle produces three pairwise similar triangles.
  • Quadratic Formula
  • Coordinate bashing

Reference

For the geometry, you may look into Challenges and Thrills of Pre College Mathematics by Venkatchala.

More Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram