Finding the Length of a Small Square

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The discussion revolves around finding the length of a small square inscribed within a larger square, both situated under a circular arc. The user initially struggles with setting up the correct equations, particularly a quadratic equation derived from the relationship between the dimensions of the squares and the circle's radius. After identifying a typo in their quadratic equation, they realize that the correct formulation leads to the right answer. Ultimately, they discover that multiplying the solution by 2 yields the length of the small square. The final answer is confirmed as R√2/5.
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Homework Statement



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a>

2. Homework Equations [/B]

The Attempt at a Solution


I can find the length of the large square.
The small square is where the trouble starts.

If I look at the part of the circle where the small square is and put a center of a coordinate system at the bottom part of the circle I can setup an equation for the arc from the lowest point on the circle to the lower right corner of the large square.

f(x) = R-\sqrt{R^2-x^2}

I know that there is some x at which the height up until the large square is twice the x-value:

2x = H - f(x)

with H the length of the lowest point of the circle up until the large square.

H = R-Rcos(45)

Now if I solve 2x = H - f(x) I get:

5x^2 + 2\sqrt{2} Rx + 0.5R^2 = 0

Which does not lead to the correct answer. The answer of the length of the small square is
\frac{R \sqrt{2}}{5}

What am I doing wrong?
 
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dirk_mec1 said:

Homework Statement



View attachment 209175

a>

2. Homework Equations [/B]

The Attempt at a Solution


I can find the length of the large square.
The small square is where the trouble starts.

If I look at the part of the circle where the small square is and put a center of a coordinate system at the bottom part of the circle I can setup an equation for the arc from the lowest point on the circle to the lower right corner of the large square.

f(x) = R-\sqrt{R^2-x^2}

I know that there is some x at which the height up until the large square is twice the x-value:

2x = H - f(x)

with H the length of the lowest point of the circle up until the large square.

H = R-Rcos(45)

Now if I solve 2x = H - f(x) I get:

5x^2 + 2\sqrt{2} Rx + 0.5R^2 = 0

Which does not lead to the correct answer. The answer of the length of the small square is
\frac{R \sqrt{2}}{5}

What am I doing wrong?
I don't have time to check your work at the moment. What I would do is use some basic right triangle trig to get the dimensions of the two squares. For simplicity, I would assume that the radius of the circle is 1. Then find the length of a side of the large square. If you know the dimensions of the large square, the length of a side of the small square is 1 - (1/2)(length of a side of the large square). Knowing the length of a side of each square, you can get the ratio of the areas of the two squares.
 
Mark44 said:
the length of a side of the small square is 1 - (1/2)(length of a side of the large square

Mmm. Can't really agree. It's actually a bit less that that.
 
I know that there are other methods. I want to know where MY method is going wrong.
 
Your quadratic equation ought to read 5x2 + 2√2Rx - 0.5R2 = 0
 
Dick said:
Mmm. Can't really agree. It's actually a bit less that that.
Yes, you are right -- my mistake. I wasn't taking into account that the distance from the lower edge of the large square to the circle isn't equal to the length of a side of the smaller square.
 
mjc123 said:
Your quadratic equation ought to read 5x2 + 2√2Rx - 0.5R2 = 0
True this was a typo but I still do not get the right answer.
 
dirk_mec1 said:
True this was a typo but I still do not get the right answer.
When I solve the corrected quadratic equation:
## 5x^2 + 2\sqrt{2} Rx - 0.5R^2 = 0 ##​
I get the correct result.
 
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Yes I figured it out. When I solve it I need to multiply with 2 to get the length!
 
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