The
following problem is in the McDougal Littell Algebra 2 textbook and is a typical word problem for a section on
solving quadratic equations:
You
have just planted a rectangular flower bed of red roses in a park near your
home. You want to plant a border of
yellow roses around the flower bed as shown.
Since you bought the same number of red and yellow roses, the areas of
the border and inner flower bed will be equal.
What should the width x of the border be?
To solve
this problem, you must first write an area equation. The length of the whole garden is 12 feet
plus the unknown widths of the left and right borders, which can be expressed
as 2x + 12. The width of the whole
garden is 8 feet plus the unknown widths of the top and bottom borders, which
can be expressed as 2x + 8. The area of
the whole garden is the area of the red rose garden (which is 8 feet times 12
feet or 96 feet squared) plus the area of the yellow rose garden (which is the
same as the red rose garden or also 96 feet squared), which added together is
192 feet squared. Since the area is
length times width, the equation to solve is (2x + 12)(2x + 8) = 192.
The next
step is to solve this area equation.
Multiplying (2x + 12)(2x + 8) gives us 4x2 + 40x + 96, so 4x2
+ 40x + 96 = 192, and subtracting 192 to the left side gives us 4x2
+ 40x – 96 = 0, and dividing everything by the common factor 4 gives us x2
+ 10x – 24 = 0. At this point, there are
several methods for solving this quadratic (such as factoring, completing the
square, quadratic equation, and graphing) but we will use the quadratic
equation x = -b ± √(b^2 – 4ac) / 2a,
where a = 1, b = 10, and c = -24.
Therefore, x = -10 ± √(10^2 – 4·1·-24) / 2·1
= -10 ± √(100 + 96) / 2 = -10 ± √196
/ 2 = -10 ± 14 / 2, which means x
= -12 or x = 2. Since x represents a
geometrical dimension, it cannot be negative, and therefore the border width x
must be 2 feet long.
You will
notice that this answer conveniently comes out as an integer, and not as a decimal. But what would happen if the problem started
out with different dimensions for the inner garden? Would the border width still be an
integer? Let us examine the same problem
but with a starting inner garden of 8 feet by 8 feet, as pictured below:
This time
both the length and the width of the whole garden can be expressed as 2x + 8,
and the area of the whole garden is 2 times 8 feet by 8 feet, or 128 feet
squared, giving us the equation (2x + 8)(2x + 8) = 128. Multiplying (2x + 8)(2x + 8) gives us 4x2
+ 32x + 64 = 128, subtracting 128 to the left side gives us 4x2 +
32x – 64 = 0, and dividing everything by the common factor 4 gives us x2
+ 8x – 16 = 0. Using the quadratic
equation x = -b ± √(b^2 – 4ac) / 2a, where
a = 1, b = 8, and c = -16 gives us x = -8 ± √(8^2
– 4·1·-16) / 2·1 = -8 ± √(64 + 64) / 2
= -8 ± √128 / 2 = -8 ± 8√2
/ 2 = -4 ± 4√2. Since x
cannot be negative, the border width must be -4 + 4√2 feet long, which is not an integer answer.
Can we come
up with different dimensions for the inner garden such that the border width
solution comes out as an integer? We
already know one solution set is (8, 12, 2) from the original problem, and using
the properties of proportions and dividing each number by two we can also
include (4, 6, 1). In fact, using the
same argument we can include all solution sets in the form of (4k, 6k, k) where
k is any positive integer. To simplify
things, we will say that (4, 6, 1) is a “garden border triple” that includes
all solutions sets in the form (4k, 6k, k), so the garden border triple (4, 6,
1) includes (4, 6, 1), (8, 12, 2), (12, 18, 3), and so on (just like the
Pythagorean triple (3, 4, 5) includes all solution sets in the form (3k, 4k,
5k)).
Are there other
garden border triples other than (4, 6, 1)?
Just as there are different Pythagorean triple solutions to the formula
a2 + b2 = c2 ((3, 4, 5), (5, 12, 13), etc.),
there are also different garden border triples.
And just as there are different Pythagorean triple generators (see here),
there are different garden border triple generators. To make one, we must generalize the garden
border problem by calling the length of the inner garden b and the width of the
inner garden h, as pictured below:
The length
of the whole garden can then be expressed as 2x + b, the width of the whole
garden can be expressed as 2x + h, and the area of the whole garden can be
expressed as 2bh, giving us the equation (2x + b)(2x + h) = 2bh. This time, however, we are going to solve
this equation for b. Multiplying (2x + b)(2x
+ h) gives us 4x2 + 2bx + 2hx + bh = 2bh, subtracting bh on both
sides gives us 4x2 + 2bx + 2hx = bh, subtracting 2bx on both sides
gives us 4x2 + 2hx = bh – 2bx, factoring 2x from the left side and b
from the right side gives us 2x(2x + h) = b(h – 2x), and dividing both sides by
h – 2x gives us b = 2x(h + 2x)/h – 2x.
We can now
use the formula b = 2x(h + 2x)/h – 2x to generate garden
border triples. If we let x = 1, then b
= 2(h + 2)/h – 2.
Then if h = 3, b = 2(3 + 2)/3 – 2 = 10, then the
garden border triple is (3, 10, 1). If h
= 4, b = 2(4 + 2)/4 – 2 = 6, then the garden border
triple is (4, 6, 1) (which is a repeat of a triple we already knew). If h = 5, b = 2(5 + 2)/5 – 2
= 14/3, then the garden border triple is (5, 14/3,
1), and to eliminate the fraction we can multiply each number by 3 to get (15,
14, 3). Continuing on in this fashion,
we also arrive at (6, 4, 1) (a repeat), (7, 18/5, 1) ≡
(35, 18, 5), (8, 10/3, 1) ≡ (24, 10, 3), (9, 22/7,
1) ≡ (63, 22, 7), (10, 3, 1) (a repeat) and so on. If we let x = 2, then b = 4(h + 4)/h
– 4, and the resulting garden border triples are (5, 36, 2), (6, 20, 2) ≡
(3, 10, 1) (a repeat), (7, 44/3, 2) ≡ (21, 44, 6), (8,
12, 2) ≡ (4, 6, 1) (a repeat), (9, 52/5, 2) ≡ (45, 52, 10),
(10, 28/3, 2) ≡ (15, 14, 3) (a repeat), and so on. If we let x = 3, then b = 6(h + 6)/h
– 6, and the resulting garden border triples are (7, 78, 3), (8, 42, 3),
(9, 30, 3) ≡ (3, 10, 1) (a repeat), (10, 24, 3), and so on.
The garden
border problem is a common word problem given to students to practice solving
quadratic equations. Most solutions come
out as a decimal answer, but there are a few scenarios in which the width,
length, and border width are all integers, which we called garden border
triples. Generalizing the problem in
terms of b and h and solving for b gave us a garden border triple generator b =
2x(h + 2x)/h – 2x.
The unique garden border triples we generated in this article were (3,
10, 1), (4, 6, 1), (15, 14, 3), (35, 18, 5), (24, 10, 3), (63, 22, 7), (5, 36,
2), (21, 44, 6), (45, 52, 10), (7, 78, 3), (8, 42, 3), and (10, 24, 3); but
there are many, many more.
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