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algebra question (1 Viewer)

Loner

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Here's an algebra problem that I hope someone can help me with. Imagine you have a right angled triangle (height = h) and base = x. The perimeter is 12 units and the area is 7 square units.

Thus,

7 = 1/2.x.h (area) and

12 = h + x + sqrt (x^2 + h^2) (perimeter)

These two equations can be combined and should reduce to the quadratic equation in terms of x. I tried for ages and wasn't able to do it. Apparently the quadratic equation gives rise to a complex solution.

Thanks in advance..
 

Riviet

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Hmm... this would probably be better in the extension 2 forum.
Anyway, from the area of the triangle formula, make h the subject, ie h=14/x, and substitute it into the perimeter equation to obtain:

14/x + x + sqrt(x2+196/x2) = 12

196/x2 + x2 + x2 + 196/x2 = 144

196 + x4 + x4 + 196 = 144

2x4=-248

x4=-124


As you can see, this will produce complex roots. :)

The only systematic way I can think of now of solving that is the equating the re and im parts of the expansion of (a+ib)4.

(a+ib)4 = -124+0i

Expanding LHS, and equating im and re parts we obtain:

a4 + b4 - 6a2b2 = -124 [1]

4a3b - 4ab3 = 0 [2]

From [2],

ab(a+b)(a-b) = 0

ab=0 or a+b=0 (a=-b) or a-b=0 (a=b)

That's all I've done. I hope that helps a bit. :)
 
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Trev

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Riviet said:

14/x + x + sqrt(x2+196/x2) = 12

196/x2 + x2 + x2 + 196/x2 = 144

If you're squaring something you have to square all of it not in parts, so that step is wrong, yea?

The third line is also incorrect.
You multiply by x<sup>2</sup> only the LHS, the RHS should be 144x<sup>2</sup> not 144.
 
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Riviet

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Thanks for spotting that Trev. ;)

Might have another go at it then.
 

insert-username

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7 = (x.h)/2 (area) (1)

12 = h + x + sqrt (x^2 + h^2) (perimeter) (2)



Therefore 14 = x.h

x = 14/h

12 = h + 14/h + √(196/h2 + h2)

√(196/h2 + h2) = 12 - h - 14/h

196/h2 + h2 = (12 - h - 14/h)2

196/h2 + h2 = 144 - 12h - 168/h - 12h + h2 + 14 - 168/h + 14 +168/h2

196/h2 + h2 = h2 - 24h + 172 - 336/h + 168/h2

0 = -24h + 172 - 336/h - 28/h2

0 = -24h3 + 172h2 - 336h - 28

0 = -6h3 + 43h2 - 84h - 7

From a quick substitution (f (-1) = 40, f(0) = -7) this function has one root between -1 and 0. But h is a distance, so it must be a positive root. I've stuffed up somewhere.... or it's totally right and I'm looking for a complex root that I can't be bothered to find. Excellent. :p


I_F
 
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Riviet

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sqrt(x2+196/x2)=12-[(x2+14)/x]

Squaring and expanding LHS and RHS,

x2+196/x2=144-(24x2+336)/x+(x4+28x2+196)/x2

Removing denominators,

x4+196=144x2-(24x3+336x)+x4+28x2+196

24x3-172x2+336x=0

6x3-43x2+84x=0

x(6x2-43x+84)=0 [reject x=0 since it is the base length]

By the quadratic formula, x=43/12 + sqrt(167).i/12

Then substitute x into h=14/x to find h.

That should be right now. :D
 

Loner

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Thanks guys, I spotted my mistake. It was with the expansion part. I should have seen that (a+b+c)^2 is the same as ((a+b) + c)^2. Maybe I should go back to grade 8 again!
 

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