Triangle ABC and Rectangle PQRS: Finding Area and Maximum Value

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Triangle ABC is a right triangle with sides AB=AC and BC=18 cm. The rectangle PQRS, with dimensions PQ=2x and QR=y, is inscribed within the triangle, maximizing its area. The area of the rectangle can be expressed as A=2xy, leading to the relation y=9√2-2x. By using calculus, the maximum area is found to be A=40.5 at x=9√2/4, which is half the area of the triangle. This approach can also be visualized without calculus by considering a similar triangle to demonstrate the maximum area.
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The figure shows a triangle ABC where AB=AC, BC=18cm and angle A is a right angle. PQRS is a rectangle with PQ=2x and QR= y cm. Find the area of PQRS and show it in terms of x.
Hence find the maximum area of the rectangle PQRS.






i tried to solve it by myself but i can't do it. Help me,

thanks a lot ^_^
 
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Could you explain the problem a little more. How does the triangle relate to the rectangle?

I'm guessing this is a problem in lagrange multipliers, where we need to maximize A = 2xy, with a certain restraint on the variables that needs to yet describe.
 
rectangle located inside of the triangle,
PQRS is given by A=18x-2x square
i missed this part sorry ^_^



i hope that it can help for solve it
 
Firstly note that for any 2x and y, we want the rectangle to have two of it sides running over the base and height of the triangle and one of its corners touching the hypotenuse to maximize the area.

With this observation, we get a relation between 2x and y. (note that I'm putting P over A here):

y = 9\sqrt{2}-2x

Since the area of the rectangle is A = 2xy = 18\sqrt{2}x-4x^2, you can use calculus to show that the maximum value of A occurs at x = \frac{9\sqrt{2}}{4} and the value of this maximum area is A = 40.5

As a side-note, notice how this is half the area of the triangle itself. Perhaps you could've concluded this without using calculus as follows:

Add a similar triangle (but flipped) to make a square. Then you'll easily see how maximum area covered will be half the area of the triangle.

I'm mentioning this because I don't know whether you want a calculus based solution or not.

I hope this helps... :)
 
thanks a lot, it was great help ^__^
 
Question: A clock's minute hand has length 4 and its hour hand has length 3. What is the distance between the tips at the moment when it is increasing most rapidly?(Putnam Exam Question) Answer: Making assumption that both the hands moves at constant angular velocities, the answer is ## \sqrt{7} .## But don't you think this assumption is somewhat doubtful and wrong?

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