Calculate Blue Surface Area of Circles and Rosette

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SUMMARY

The discussion focuses on calculating the blue surface area of circles and a rosette within an equilateral triangle. The circles have radii of 3 cm and 1 cm, while the rosette's area is derived from the area of three segments minus the area of the triangle. The correct formula for the rosette's area is confirmed to be \(\frac{a^2}{6}(2 \pi - 3 \sqrt{3})\). Participants share various methods, including Heron's Formula and the congruence theorem, to arrive at the correct solutions.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of Heron's Formula for triangle area calculation
  • Knowledge of trigonometry, specifically the cosine rule
  • Familiarity with the concept of sectors in circle geometry
  • Basic algebra for manipulating equations and expressions
NEXT STEPS
  • Study Heron's Formula for generalized triangle area calculations
  • Learn about the cosine rule and its applications in triangle geometry
  • Explore the properties of circle sectors and their area calculations
  • Review congruence theorems in geometry for problem-solving techniques
USEFUL FOR

Students tackling geometry problems, particularly those involving circles and triangles, as well as educators seeking to clarify concepts related to area calculations and geometric proofs.

kristo
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Homework Statement


Find the blue colored surface area.
1 http://img338.imageshack.us/img338/1630/graph1zd7.png
The radii of the circles are 3 cm and 1 cm.
2 Find the surface area of the rosette inside the equilateral triangle with side a.
http://img87.imageshack.us/img87/2590/graph2dj9.png

Homework Equations


The Attempt at a Solution


I have no idea what to do with the first one.For the 2nd one the area of the rosette inside the triangle should be the area of 3 segments minus the area of the triangle.
Here's a picture of what I did, with one circle only:
http://img339.imageshack.us/img339/4650/circlerd9.png
This is what I got: \frac{a^2}{6}(2 \pi - \frac{3 \sqrt {3} }{2})
But the book says it's \frac{a^2}{6}(2 \pi - 3 \sqrt {3} ), so can anyone check it?
 
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Precalc? I have no idea on the 2nd one, the first one you have you do a few things.First develop an expression for the area of the quadrilateral using Herons Formula for triangles generalized, i can't rememeber the precise name.

A=\sqrt{(s-a)(s-b)(s-c)(s-d)} where S = a+b+c+d, a b c and d are the lengths of the sides.

Then draw a line from A to B and A to C. Use the cosine rule to find an expression for the angles at 01 and 02. Using those angles, you can see how much of the circles area it encompasses. Now find the area of the sectors and subtract from the rectangle.

You won't get a very nice answer.

For then 2nd one, what is it that you want us to check? It isn't very clear.
 
Hey, thanks for your reply.
I had another go at the 1st problem and I solved it, got the same answer as the book. I did differently than you, though, using the congruence theorem and some trig.
http://xs.to/xs.php?h=xs114&d=07170&f=matenurk.png

Oh and there's a tiny difference between mine and the book's answer for the 2nd problem, just wanted to check who is right..
Thanks again!
 

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