How do you solve this?
Mr. Hamilton is placing a support plank along the diagonal of a gate. The height of the gate is 5 feet, and the diagonal is 1 foot longer than the width of the gate, as shown below.
What is the width, in feet, of the gate?
Mr. Hamilton is placing a support plank along the diagonal of a gate. The height of the gate is 5 feet, and the diagonal is 1 foot longer than the width of the gate, as shown below.
What is the width, in feet, of the gate?
2 Answers
Explanation:
By Pythagoras:
(w+1)^2 = w^2+5^2
That is:
w^2+2w+1 = w^2+25
Subtracting
2w = 24
Divide both sides by
w = 12
So the gate is
Footnote
The first few right angled triangles with sides
3, 4, 5
5, 12, 13
7, 24, 25
9, 40, 41
In general, they take the form:
a, (a^2-1)/2, (a^2+1)/2
for any odd value of
Explanation:
Using
color(blue)"Pythagoras' theorem" on the right triangle.
color(orange)"Reminder" The square on the hypotenuse of a right triangle is equal to the sum of the squares on the other two sides.
rArr(w+1)^2=w^2+5^2
rArrw^2+2w+1=w^2+25 subtract
w^2 from both sides.
cancel(w^2)cancel(-w^2)+2w+1=cancel(w^2)cancel(-w^2)+25
rArr2w+1=25 subtract 1 from both sides.
2wcancel(+1)cancel(-1)=25-1
rArr2w=24 divide both sides by 2
(cancel(2) w)/cancel(2)=24/2
rArrw=12" is the solution" That is, the width of the gate is 12 feet.