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The right pentagon (Posted on 2004-06-12) Difficulty: 3 of 5
There is a pentagon ABCDE such that angles A, C, and E are all right angles and it is concave at angle C.

If a ray starting at D was aimed at C, it would go exactly 1 inch before going through C, and would eventually go through A.

If BC and AE are both 5 inches, what is the area of this pentagon?

See The Solution Submitted by Gamer    
Rating: 3.3333 (6 votes)

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Solution Solution | Comment 6 of 11 |

Using Tristan's drawing, by Pythagoras, BD² = 5² + 1² = 26.

Then draw a ray from D to AB, parallel to AE, meeting at X.
So BX² = BD² - DX² = 1.  Hence AB = DE + 1.

By Pythagoras, DE² + 25 = (AC + 1)²,  (1) and
AC² + 25 = AB², and so AC² + 25 = (DE + 1)².  (2)

(1) - (2) => DE² - AC² = AC² - DE² + 2AC - 2DE.

Hence 2(DE² - AC²) = 2(DE - AC)(DE + AC) = 2(AC - DE).
Either DE - AC = 0 or DE + AC = -1, so we choose DE = AC.
Then, from (1), 2DE + 1 = 25, and DE = 12.

The area of the pentagon equals the area of right triangle ABC plus the area of right triangle ADE.

So the area equals ½AC·BC + ½AE·DE.

Area = ½·12·5 + ½·5·12 = 60 square inches.


  Posted by Nick Hobson on 2004-06-13 10:26:15
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