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nolachrymose
Sep26-04, 03:33 PM
Hi all,

I have this problem that I have no idea where to start. It asks to prove for a triangle with altitudes h_a, h_b, and h_c, that

\frac{1}{h_a} < \frac{1}{h_b} + \frac{1}{h_c}

Any idea how to begin this proof? I've tried all sorts of algebra, and utitlizing the Triangle Inequality, but I can't seem to reach this conclusion. Any help is greatly appreciated -- thank you! :)

The Bob
Sep26-04, 03:46 PM
Hi all,

I have this problem that I have no idea where to start. It asks to prove for a triangle with altitudes h_a, h_b, and h_c, that

\frac{1}{h_a} < \frac{1}{h_b} + \frac{1}{h_c}

Any idea how to begin this proof? I've tried all sorts of algebra, and utitlizing the Triangle Inequality, but I can't seem to reach this conclusion. Any help is greatly appreciated -- thank you! :)

What do you mean by altitudes h_a h_b and h_c???

The Bob (2004 ©)

robphy
Sep26-04, 03:53 PM
possible hint: "area"

arildno
Sep26-04, 03:57 PM
I'll upgrade that into a probable hint :wink:

The Bob
Sep26-04, 04:06 PM
I'll upgrade that into a probable hint :wink:

So the h_a, h_b and h_c are all angles???

The Bob (2004 ©)

arildno
Sep26-04, 04:18 PM
No, they are heights:
Let A be the area.
Then a=A/h_a, b=A/h_b,c=A/h_c
Using the triangle inequality for a,b,c yields the proposition.

nolachrymose
Sep26-04, 07:44 PM
Sorry I didn't post sooner -- I figured it out on my own a little after I had posted, but didn't have time to post my solution. I used the method Arildno suggested.
Thank you for your input, though! :)