The problem:
Six points have been arranged so that the 15 segments that join
them in pairs have different lengths and point in different directions. Prove
that one of these segments is the longest side of one of the triangles that are
formed and, at the same time, the shortest side of another triangle. Is the same
claim true when starting with five points (and the 10 segments joining them in
pairs have different lengths and different directions)?
The given conditions insure that any three of the points form a
triangle with one shortest, one medium, and one longest side. (It is clear that
the points and lines could be replaced by the 6 vertices and 15 edges of a
complete graph, with different numbers assigned to each edge, but we will stay
with the language of geometry.) Colour a segment red if it is the shortest side
of at least one triangle, and colour all other segments blue. Because every
triangle has a shortest side, we deduce that
(*) the configuration contains no blue triangle.
Let us look at one of the points P and the five segments that
connect it to the other points. Since they are either red or blue, we know (from
the pidgeonhole principle) that
(A) three or more of the segments from P are red,
or
(B) three or more of the segments from P are blue.
In either case, the configuration has a red triangle: Should (A)
hold then the other three endpoints of the red segments form a triangle with at
least one red side (because of *); this side together with the two adjacent red
sides connected to P form a red triangle. On the other hand, should (B) hold,
then (*) implies that none of the segments connecting two of the three other
endpoints of the blue lines from P can be blue, so those three segments form a
red triangle.
The red triangle we have found corresponds to three segments
connecting three points, where each segment appears as the shortest side in at
least one of the 20 triangles of the configuration. Of course, this triangle
contains a longest side which, because it is red, is at the same time the
shortest side of some triangle.
Comment. We did not use the minimality of a
shortest side in the argument. Since every triangle contains exactly one
shortest, one longest, and one medium-length side, our argument shows that at
least one of the 20 triangles consists of three sides that each appear as the
shortest side of some triangle, at least one of the triangles consists of three
sides that each appear as the medium-length side of some triangle, and at least
one of the triangles consists of three sides that each appear as the longest
side of some triangle.
To see that the claim is not true starting with five points,
perturb the vertices of a regular pentagon slightly so that the five sides are
all of different lengths as are the five diagonals. This can be accomplished so
that the shortest of the diagonals remains longer than the longest of the sides.
This means that no triangle determined by these five points would have three
sides Five points can be arranged so that five of the segments joining pairs of
the points are each the shortest side of some triangle and never the longest,
while the five segments joining the remaining pairs of points are each the
longest side of some triangle and never the shortest.
math central
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