besulzbach said:
I wan't further explanation on this.
The OP didn't think this was important enough to put in the original post:
neuro.akn said:
That's all there is. The only other thing really is that it states the box has square ends.
besulzbach said:
Well, we can say that l_{1} = l_{2} and then use l_{1}^{2} to account for both variables.
Instead of using one variable with subscripts, why not use different variables whose names are reflective of what they represent? IOW, l for length, w for width, and h for height.
Based on what I think is the level of mathematical sophistication, names like l, w, and h are easier to understand than l
1, l
2, and l
3. Furthermore, the notation gets pretty gnarly when you combine subscripts and exponents as you did; e.g. l
12. Here the notation becomes an impediment to understanding.
besulzbach said:
But, when you say that a third variable is not necessary you are claiming what exactly? Do you see a way to get a quadratic equation for this problem?
The given information in the problem is that the end is square, so h = w, and that the length is 13 more than the width, so l = 13 + w.
From this we can write the equation for volume as 60 = l * w * h = (13 + w) * w
2. This is a cubic, of course. To find the dimensions you have to solve this cubic equation.
besulzbach said:
I don't mean to be rude, I just want to know if there is a simpler way because some problems I get at school are really similar and solving quadratics is, as you said before, usually considerably faster (and easier).
Right, and I don't consider you asking to be rude. The equation you end up having to solve is a cubic - there's no getting around that. Sometimes cubics are difficult to solve, but in this case, using the rational root theorem and synthetic division (or long division if you don't know synthetic division), one root pops out almost immediately.