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Given the Vertices, Find the Area (Posted on 2023-08-19) Difficulty: 3 of 5
Consider square with vertices at (1,1), (-1,1), (-1, -1), and (1, -1).

S is the region which consists of all points inside the square which are nearer to the origin than any edge of this square.

Determine the area of S.

See The Solution Submitted by K Sengupta    
Rating: 5.0000 (1 votes)

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Solution Polar coordinates Comment 4 of 4 |
Again consider 1/8 of the square, a 1-1-√2 triangle with vertices:
    (0,0), (0,1), (1,1).
Consider a point (r,Θ).  It is distance r from the center, 
and 1 - r*cos(Θ) from the closest edge.
r = 1 - r*cos(Θ)
r = 1/(1 + cos(Θ))
The area inside the locus of points that forms the boundary is
integral from 0 to pi/4 of (1/2)*r^2 * dΘ
or integral of (1/2)(1/(1 + cos(Θ)))^2 dΘ

Wolfram Alpha says this is:  
integral (1/2)(1/(1 + cos(Θ)))^2 dΘ 
= (sin(Θ)*(cos(Θ) + 2))/(6*(cos(Θ) + 1)^2) + constant
or for the definite integral with the limits in question:
= 1/6 (4 sqrt(2) - 5)  ≈  0.10948

And multiplying that result by 8 gives the same answer as found previously:
    ≈ 0.87584

  Posted by Larry on 2024-03-01 11:34:42
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