A triangle has vertices A, B, and C. Vertex A has an angle of pi/8 π8, vertex B has an angle of ( pi)/4 π4, and the triangle's area is 42 42. What is the area of the triangle's incircle?

1 Answer
Apr 23, 2018

text{incircle_area} = {2 pi mathcal{A} tan^2(A/2) tan^2(C/2)}/{ tan A(tan(A/2) + tan(C/2))^2} approx 19.6399

Explanation:

The incircle is tangent to all the sides. The incenter, its center, is the meet of the angle bisectors.

When I have trouble getting started I pin my triangle to the Cartesian plane. C(0,0), A(a,0), B(b,c).

Let's express our facts;

A=\pi/8

B=pi/4

C = \pi-pi/8-pi/4={5pi}/8

tan A = c/a

tan C = c/b

Let's call the area mathcal{A=42}.

mathcal{A} = 1/2 a c

That's three equations in three unknowns. We mostly care about a.

2 mathcal{A} = ac = a (a tan A)=a^2 tan A

a = \sqrt{ {2 mathcal{A} }/ tan A}

Tangents are slopes. The perpendicular bisector of C has equation

y = x tan (C/2)

The perpendicular bisector of A has equation

y = -(x-a) tan (A/2)

Those meet at the incenter, when

x tan(C/2) = -x tan(A/2) + a tan (A/2)

x = {a tan(A/2)}/{tan(A/2) + tan(C/2)}

y = {a tan(A/2) tan(C/2)}/{tan(A/2) + tan(C/2)}

The incenter is (x,y) and the incircle is tangent to AC, the x axis, so the radius is y and the incircle's area is pi y^2.

Let's put everything together.

text{incircle_area} = {2 pi mathcal{A} tan^2(A/2) tan^2(C/2)}/{ tan A(tan(A/2) + tan(C/2))^2}

There's probably some simplification to be done here, but let's plug in the numbers to see if I've gone off the deep end. I'd guess from my rough sketch an area a little less than half, around 20.

Feeding it to Alpha gets an approxmate incircle area of 19.6399, closer to my guess than I would have guessed. Hard to believe I didn't make a mistake getting this far, but let's proceed.

That's motivation to work out the exact answer but I'm getting length warnings, so let's stop here.