by RonPurewal Thu Aug 13, 2009 4:05 am
hmm ok, here's the story here.
it turns out that the picture that's been posted is grossly not to scale, and that the arc that's drawn directly from a to c (the arc at the bottom of the picture - not the arc that threads through point b) is the arc that's being referred to.
HERE'S THE CONFUSION (which is certainly the fault of the problem author(s)):
what they're TRYING to do is to call the arc "AC" in order to tell you that they're NOT talking about the arc that goes through point b.
then they're ALSO trying to inform you that this is a major arc.
this isn't very good writing. what they should do is just insert another point between a and c - call it "Q" - and then just talk about "arc AQC". there shouldn't be any need to mention major/minor, as the algebra will reveal that automatically (and it's not good form to drop needless hints).
also, technically, they HAVE to do this, because major arcs must be named by three points. if we use two letters to name the arc, then that defaults to the minor arc, a situation that will actually destroy the integrity of this problem (since that arc would actually be arc ABC here).
i will submit this problem for revision.
--
in any case:
imagine that there's point Q between a and c, and then replace "major arc AC" with "arc AQC" in the problem statement.
then:
according to the two given facts, arc BC is the smallest, so let's call it 'x'.
then according to the first statement, arc AB is '2x'.
then according to the second statement, arc AQC is '6x' (since it's three times 2x).
together these form a complete circle, so x + 2x + 6x = 360, or, x = 40.
therefore, arc ab is 80.
the desired angle is half the measure of this arc (the arc that it "intercepts"), so it's 40.