Proving Triangle Area of Curve x^2-2y^2=4 Constant

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on proving that the area of the triangle formed by the asymptotes of the hyperbola defined by the equation x^2 - 2y^2 = 4 and any tangent line is constant. Participants express difficulty in finding the asymptotes and understanding the problem due to lack of prior instruction on the topic. A suggestion is made to review the basics of hyperbolas and their asymptotes, with a link provided for further reading. The importance of sharing any attempted work is emphasized to facilitate better assistance. The conversation highlights the need for foundational knowledge to tackle the problem effectively.
Nima
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Prove that the triangle formed by the asymptotes of the curve with equation x^2 - 2y^2 = 4 and any tangent to the curve is of constant area.

Thanks. :)
 
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Homework? Well, the answer is do it: find the equations of the asymptotes, and a tangent and voila do it.
 
I'm having problems finding the asymptotes.
 
Could anyone help me do this Q? Thanks.
 
Please could someone show me how to do this Question? I'm having difficulties, because I've barely been taught this chapter and I want to at least see how such a question is answered. Thanks.
 
You have to let us know what u have done?
Post whatever working u have done(even if its wrong its fine), since that would help us to pitch the answer at the right frequency.

-- AI
 
TenaliRaman said:
You have to let us know what u have done?
Post whatever working u have done(even if its wrong its fine), since that would help us to pitch the answer at the right frequency.

-- AI
I really don't know where to start, I don't know how to find the asymptotes of the curve, that's a key problem...
 
Ok u need to run through the basics a bit then.
First of all,
the equation u have is a hyperbola
Read abt hyperbolas here,
http://colalg.math.csusb.edu/~devel/precalcdemo/conics/src/hyperbola.html

Asymptotes are mentioned in this article and its also explained how they are obtained.
I will leave the rest to you for now. Try to go ahead and solve your original problem. If u are getting stuck again, post your working.

-- AI
 
for starters, the asymptotes of xy = 1 seem to be the x and y axes y=0 and x=0, [take derivative of y = 1/x, get -1/x^2, and let x go to infinity, so the slope goes to zero, or let x go to zero, and the slope goes to infinity] so after rotating axes, the asymptotes of uv = (x-y)(x+y) = 1, are probably the lines u=0 and v=0, i.e. x = y and x = -y.

you might look at this to be sure, as I am allergic this type of thing.
 

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