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Question
In the adjoining figure AB > AC. If OB and OC are the bisectors of ∠ABC and ∠ACB, respectively, then prove that OB > ОС.

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Solution
Given:
- In triangle ABC, AB > AC.
- OB and OC are the internal bisectors of ∠ABC and ∠ACB, respectively, so O is the intersection of those bisectors.
To Prove:
- OB > OC.
Proof:
1. From AB > AC,
The angle opposite the longer side is larger.
Hence ∠C > ∠B.
2. Since OB and OC are angle bisectors,
`∠OBD = 1/2 ∠ABC = B/2` where D is the foot of the perpendicular from O on BC,
`∠OCD = 1/2 ∠ACB = C/2`.
3. Let D be the perpendicular foot from O to BC; then OD = r the inradius and triangles OBD and OCD are right triangles at D.
4. In right triangle OBD,
`sin (B/2) = "Opposite"/"Hypotenuse"`
= `(OD)/(OB)`
= `r/(OB)`
Hence, `OB = r/sin (B/2)`.
Similarly, in right triangle OCD,
`OC = r/sin (C/2)`
5. Because ∠C > ∠B, we have `C/2 > B/2`.
For angles in (0, 90°), the sine function is increasing.
So, `sin (C/2) > sin (B/2)`.
6. Thus, `1/sin (B/2) > 1/sin (C/2)` and multiplying by r > 0 gives `OB = r/sin (B/2) > r/sin (C/2) = OC`.
OB > OC, as required.
