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17 April, 14:09

Rectangle R has varying length l and width w but a constant perimeter of 4 ft. A. Express the area A as a function of l. What do you know about this function? B. For what values of l and w will the area of R be greatest? Give an algebraic argument. Give a geometric arguement.

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  1. 17 April, 14:18
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    Given:

    l = length of the rectangle

    w = width of the rectangle

    P = 4 ft, constant perimeter

    Because the given perimeter is constant,

    2 (w + l) = 4

    w + l = 2

    w = 2 - l (1)

    Part A.

    The area is

    A = w*l

    = (2 - l) * l

    A = 2l - l²

    This is a quadratic function or a parabola.

    Part B.

    Write the parabola in standard form.

    A = - [l² - 2l]

    = - [ (l - 1) ² - 1]

    = - (l - 1) ² + 1

    This is a parabola with vertex at (1, 1). Because the leading coefficient is negative the curve is downward, as shown below.

    The maximum value occurs at the vertex, so the maximum value of A = 1.

    From equation (1), obtain

    w = 2 - l = 2 - 1 = 1.

    The maximum value of the area occurs when w=1 and l=1 (a square).

    Answer:

    The area is maximum when l=1 and w=1.

    The geometric argument is based on the vertex of the parabola denoting maximum area.
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