View Full Version : Problem of the week helpp
calvinnn
Dec14-04, 02:36 AM
I posted this before, but i messed up on the wording, so heres my repost. My teacher gave us our problem of the week (which was previously on our test), and i have no idea on how to solve it. All i know is that i will probably need to differentiate something, and then find the criticle numbers. OK, so here it goes:
Use Calculus to prove which vertex angle gives an isosceles triangle the greatest area
Figure Below
THank You
learningphysics
Dec14-04, 02:50 AM
Doesn't dextercioby give the solution here:
http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=56279
I think you were already given the solution someplace else but perhaps you're looking for more detail?
The first question is do you have any contraints in the problem? For example, is the perimeter of the triangle fixed? I'd guess that the length of the equal sides is fixed since they are labled "K" which suggests a constant.
In that case the area of the triangle is
A = K^2 \sin \frac {\theta}{2} \cos \frac {\theta}{2} = \frac {1}{2}K^2 \sin \theta
where \theta is the vertex angle. Does that help?
calvinnn
Dec14-04, 09:51 AM
things seem a bit clearer
Thanks
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