(1) Find the side of a regular tetrahedron which is inside a sphere of radius ' r ', Exactly fitting.
(Just as a triangle has circumcircle, say the Tetrahedron has a Circumsphere)
(2) A solid tetrahedron is sliced off a wooden cube of side 'a' by a plane passing through two nonadjacent vertices on one face and one vertex on the opposite face not adjacent to either of the first two vertices.
The tetrahedron is discarded and the remaining portion of the cube is placed on a table with the cut surface face down.
What is the height of this object?
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Answer for (2):
A better description of the problem is a plane passing through all the vertexes connected to a vertex by sides.
The diagonal of this cube is sqrt2 a which we shall call b for simplicity.
Now we have a tetrahedron with base length of b and side length of a
Now we proceed to calculate the height of this shape:
1) the base of the triangle:
Imagine a top view of the tetrahedron, an equilateral triangle split into three equal isosceles triangles (sides b, c and c). (30, 30, 120 degrees) (as they bisect the 60 degree angle of the equilateral triangle)
First we find the length from the mid point of b to the centre of the triangle. (cosine rule works) but i shall use area for simplicity.
Area of equilateral triangle is (b^2 root(3))/4
area of one isosceles is one third this (b^2 root(3))/12
area is also half bc sin(30)
solve for c and you get (b root(3))/3
using pythag you get (b root(3))/6 for the distance from midpoint of b to the centre
2) the face of the triangle
the length obviously = b/2
by pythag we have the height of the tetrahedron as 2 root{2}b
pythag gives us root(2)b as the diagonal length
now the length of the diagonal - the hight of the tetrahedron will give the answer to the question, but i have made an error somewhere along the way.
i currently do not have the time to re-do but i shall do so later. sorry.
I shall post this anyway as it shows the process (minus algebraic manipulation) to reach the answer
also sorry i cannot figure out formatting and i'm pressed for time
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https://docs.google.com/drawings/d/1oHYGjPz9EkEbH41fZXW98-3_94A0R6x5jJP2ollIOwk/edit?usp=sharing
thanks Felix
2nd problem is really good I had to use the Colours Cube (played as a puzzle) for the imagination :P....Ans can be found by subtracting height of tetrahedron from body diagonal of cube so ans is 32a
Worked solution...Consider the tetrahedron with vertical angle 2π steradian (angle at vertex of cube) and base equilateral triangle of side 2a (which is face diagonal of cube )............This equilateral triangle has C as circumcentre and it's circumradius will be 32(212a)= 322a=32a
Then apical vertex A joined to C say circumcentre(=centroid=incentre) of base will be height of tetrahedron .
In the right angled ΔABC formed by joining a base vertex say B , apical vertex A and C circumcentre of base, The hypotenuse is AB of length 'a' which was side of cube. The segment BC is of length circumradius of base=32a so AC (height of Tetrahedron) is a2−32a2=3a by Pythagoras' theorem
As the body diagonal of Cube is 3a and height of Tetrahedron is 3a,
The answer is a(3−31)= 32a
Actually this is perhaps the same way which Felix wanted to say but i hadn't read it before so didn't post as reply to Felix
I feel 1st one will be easy if someone tells what is the formula for Height of a regular tetrahedron.......
For question 1 the centre of the tetrahedron will also the the centre of the sphere find the point then the distance from this point to the vertex will be the spheres radius (or work backwards from this length if you find reverse proofs easier)
What is 2d and 3d geometry?