A plot consists of a rectangular garden measuring 8 m by 10 m, surrounded by a path of constant width, as shown in the diagram - Junior Cycle Mathematics - Question 9 - 2011
Question 9
A plot consists of a rectangular garden measuring 8 m by 10 m, surrounded by a path of constant width, as shown in the diagram. The total area of the plot (garden an... show full transcript
Worked Solution & Example Answer:A plot consists of a rectangular garden measuring 8 m by 10 m, surrounded by a path of constant width, as shown in the diagram - Junior Cycle Mathematics - Question 9 - 2011
Step 1
Write, in terms of $x$, the area of each section into Kevin's diagram below.
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Answer
In Kevin's diagram, the plot is divided into four types of sections:
Corners: There are four corner squares, each with area x2.
Top and Bottom: There are two rectangles at the top and bottom, each with area ximes8=8x (for both top and bottom, this gives 16x in total).
Sides: There are two rectangles at the sides, each with area ximes10=10x (for both sides, this gives 20x in total).
Center: The area of the middle rectangle is 8imes10=80 m².
Thus, the total area equation is:
4x2+16x+20x+80.
Step 2
Write down and simplify the equation that Kevin should get. Give your answer in the form $ax^2 + bx + c = 0$.
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Answer
Combining the areas from all sections gives:
4x2+36x+80=143.
Next, move 143 to the left side:
4x2+36x+80−143=0
Thus, the simplified equation is:
4x2+36x−63=0.
Step 3
Write, in terms of $x$, the length and the width of the plot in the spaces on Elaine's diagram.
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Answer
For Elaine's diagram, the overall width includes the width of the garden plus the width of the path on both sides. So the width is:
Width=8+2x
Similarly, the overall length is:
Length=10+2x.
Step 4
Write down and simplify the equation that Elaine should get. Give your answer in the form $ax^2 + bx + c = 0$.
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Answer
The total area for Elaine's diagram is calculated as follows:
(8+2x)(10+2x)=143.
Expanding this gives:
80+16x+20x+4x2=143.
Collecting terms results in:
4x2+36x+80−143=0
Thus, we have:
4x2+36x−63=0.
Step 5
Solve an equation to find the width of the path.
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Answer
Factoring the equation:
4x2+36x−63=0
We can divide through by 4, resulting in:
x2+9x−15.75=0
Applying the quadratic formula gives:
x = rac{-b \pm ext{sqrt}(b^2 - 4ac)}{2a}
In our scenario, this results in potential widths of either:
x = rac{3}{2} ext{ or } x = -21
However, we take the positive width, where:
x=1.5extm.
Step 6
Show some calculations that Tony might have used to solve the problem.
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Answer
Tony chooses to test values for x such as:
For x=1: Area = (8+2)(10+2)=120extm2.
For x=2: Area = (8+4)(10+4)=168extm2.
For x=3: Area = (8+6)(10+6)=224extm2.
Finally, for x=1.5: Area = (8+3)(10+3)=143extm2.
This leads him to find the correct area at x=1.5.
Step 7
Which of the three methods do you think is best? Give a reason for your answer.
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Answer
Answer: Elaine's method is best.
Reason: Although all methods provide the correct answer, Elaine's method is the quickest and simplest. Tony's method of trial and error could result in possible errors, while Kevin's requires complex calculations to derive the equation.
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