Place two pennies on a table each touching a third, but not each other. The centers of the three form a certain angle.
For what angle will the area of the convex hull of this shape be maximized?
I found the same as Bractals, here is my method.
I called the radius of a penny 'r' and the convex angle θ.
The triangle of the centers of the pennies has sides:
2r, 2r, and 2 √(2) r (1-cos θ).
The area of the convex hull is the sum of the following areas:
* the central triangle formed by the centers of the pennies,
* 3 rectangles whose bases are each side of said triangle and with height r
* 3 arcs of a circle corresponding to the portions of the pennies not covered by either of the above (note that these 3 arcs add up to one full circle of radius r)
The area of the triangle is: 2 r² sin(θ)
The area of the 3 rectangles is: 4 ² + 2 √(2) r² (1-cos θ)
The area of one circle: πr²
Take the derivative wrt θ and set equal to zero:
2x³ - 3x² + 1 = 0 (where x = cos(θ))
(x-1)² * (2x + 1) , so either cosθ = 1 or -(1/2)
So θ is either zero degrees (minimum area) or 120 degrees.
Final answer: 120º
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Posted by Larry
on 2014-08-31 11:08:23 |