Question 48·200 Super-Hard SAT Math Questions·Geometry and Trigonometry
In equilateral triangle , point lies on segment such that
Segment is drawn. Which choice gives the measure of angle ?
When a point divides a side of an equilateral (or isosceles) triangle by an unusual ratio, a coordinate setup is often the fastest path: put the base on the -axis, use the known height of an equilateral triangle to locate the top vertex, convert the ratio into an exact coordinate for the point, and then use slopes to compute the angle between two segments. This avoids messy angle chasing and keeps the work algebraic and controlled.
Hints
Use a coordinate setup
Because is equilateral, you can place and on the -axis and write coordinates for using the -- triangle height.
Translate the ratio into a coordinate
If you choose , then the condition tells you the -coordinate of directly.
Compare the directions of and
Find the slopes of and , then use to get the angle between them.
Identify the angle from its tangent
After simplifying, try rewriting the tangent value by rationalizing; then compare it to .
Desmos Guide
Define the points with convenient coordinates
Enter
B=(0,0)C=(1,0)A=(1/2, sqrt(3)/2)D=(2-sqrt(3), 0)
Compute the slopes
Define
mAB=(y(A)-y(B))/(x(A)-x(B))mAD=(y(A)-y(D))/(x(A)-x(D))
Compute the angle between the lines in degrees
Define
theta=abs(arctan((mAD-mAB)/(1+mAD*mAB)))*180/pi
Then look at the displayed value of theta and choose the answer option that matches it.
Step-by-step Explanation
Place the triangle on a coordinate plane
Scale does not matter, so let and . Since is equilateral, the third vertex is
Because and , point is
Find the slopes of and
Slope of :
Slope of :
Rationalize the denominator:
So .
Use the angle-between-lines formula
If two non-vertical lines have slopes and , then the tangent of the angle between them is
Here,
Rationalize:
Match the tangent value to a standard angle
Using ,
So means . Therefore, the measure of angle is .