I'm having a lot of trouble with similar triangles

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The discussion centers on understanding the application of similar triangles and the use of trigonometric ratios, specifically cosine. Participants explore the equation setup for two triangles, highlighting the confusion in manipulating the variables. The key solution involves multiplying both sides of the equation to eliminate the variable from the denominator, leading to a quadratic equation. Additionally, the concept of taking reciprocals is discussed, but it is emphasized that removing the variable from the denominator is crucial for solving the problem. Overall, the conversation clarifies the steps needed to solve similar triangle problems effectively.
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Seriously, I understand it sometimes, but when it hits me with something like this, I'm just baffled...
 
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A matter of writing down ##\cos\theta## in two ways: for the left triangle it's ?/50 and for the right one it's 32/? So ##{?\over 50} = {32\over ?}##
 
BvU said:
A matter of writing down ##\cos\theta## in two ways: for the left triangle it's ?/50 and for the right one it's 32/? So ##{?\over 50} = {32\over ?}##
See, that's the part I get because of SOH CAH TOA. It's cosine, CAH, Adjacent over the Hypotenuse. The other one is completely the opposite. I set the problem up just like you did, but I really don't know where to go from there. ##{?\over 50} = {32\over ?}## That is what is baffling me.
 
Multiply left and right with 50 ?, to get ##?^2 = 50 \times 32##
 
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BvU said:
Multiply left and right with 50 ?, to get ##?^2 = 50 \times 32##
Perfect! Now I completely understand the logic behind it! On another note, ##{30\over ?} = {?\over 32}##, if it had been formatted like this, do I simply take the reciprocal like this: ##{?\over 30} = {32\over ?}##
Basically, I'm getting at the fact that the variable (which typically is x) isn't supposed to be on the bottom?
 
JR Sauerland said:
Perfect! Now I completely understand the logic behind it! On another note, ##{30\over ?} = {?\over 32}##, if it had been formatted like this, do I simply take the reciprocal like this: ##{?\over 30} = {32\over ?}##
Basically, I'm getting at the fact that the variable (which typically is x) isn't supposed to be on the bottom?

Do you understand how BvU went from

\frac{x}{50}=\frac{32}{x}
to
x^2=50\times 32
 
Mentallic said:
Do you understand how BvU went from

\frac{x}{50}=\frac{32}{x}
to
x^2=50\times 32
I think so. Didn't he multiply both sides by (50x)? It eliminated x in the denominator of the right side, and squared the x in the left side due to the fact that it was on top. I've heard you could cross multiple too though, although I don't know if it would be completely different or not...
 
JR Sauerland said:
I think so. Didn't he multiply both sides by (50x)? It eliminated x in the denominator of the right side, and squared the x in the left side due to the fact that it was on top. I've heard you could cross multiple too though, although I don't know if it would be completely different or not...

Right, so apply the same idea to your new problem. Taking the reciprocal of both sides is a valid operation, but it doesn't help you because you want to remove the variable from the denominator, which just so happens to give us a quadratic (squared value of x) in this sort of problem.

Also, cross multiplying is exactly multiplying both sides by 50x. It's just a means to help students visualize or to rote learn the process more easily.
 

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