Area of Semi Circle With an Inscribed Triangle












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Suppose we have a triangle with a right angle at its height, with side a, 10 inches, side b, unknown, and side c, 24 inches; inscribed in a semi-circle. enter image description here



Now, I'm asked to find the area of the semi circle only, in terms of $pi$. I was already given the answer, which is $84.5pi -120 in^2$, but I don't understand how to get this conclusion.



I tried finding the area this way, but I get a pretty different answer:
$A=frac{pi r^2}{2}, r=12 inches$



$$A=frac{144pi}{2}$$



$$A=72pi in^2$$



Then I know I have to subtract the triangle because I only want the area of the shaded region (the semi-circle), so



$$10^2+B^2=24^2$$



$$2sqrt{119}$$



So I end up getting an answer of $A=72pi-2sqrt{119} in^2$ which is clearly false. Could anyone explain where I went wrong?










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$endgroup$

















    1












    $begingroup$


    Suppose we have a triangle with a right angle at its height, with side a, 10 inches, side b, unknown, and side c, 24 inches; inscribed in a semi-circle. enter image description here



    Now, I'm asked to find the area of the semi circle only, in terms of $pi$. I was already given the answer, which is $84.5pi -120 in^2$, but I don't understand how to get this conclusion.



    I tried finding the area this way, but I get a pretty different answer:
    $A=frac{pi r^2}{2}, r=12 inches$



    $$A=frac{144pi}{2}$$



    $$A=72pi in^2$$



    Then I know I have to subtract the triangle because I only want the area of the shaded region (the semi-circle), so



    $$10^2+B^2=24^2$$



    $$2sqrt{119}$$



    So I end up getting an answer of $A=72pi-2sqrt{119} in^2$ which is clearly false. Could anyone explain where I went wrong?










    share|cite|improve this question











    $endgroup$















      1












      1








      1





      $begingroup$


      Suppose we have a triangle with a right angle at its height, with side a, 10 inches, side b, unknown, and side c, 24 inches; inscribed in a semi-circle. enter image description here



      Now, I'm asked to find the area of the semi circle only, in terms of $pi$. I was already given the answer, which is $84.5pi -120 in^2$, but I don't understand how to get this conclusion.



      I tried finding the area this way, but I get a pretty different answer:
      $A=frac{pi r^2}{2}, r=12 inches$



      $$A=frac{144pi}{2}$$



      $$A=72pi in^2$$



      Then I know I have to subtract the triangle because I only want the area of the shaded region (the semi-circle), so



      $$10^2+B^2=24^2$$



      $$2sqrt{119}$$



      So I end up getting an answer of $A=72pi-2sqrt{119} in^2$ which is clearly false. Could anyone explain where I went wrong?










      share|cite|improve this question











      $endgroup$




      Suppose we have a triangle with a right angle at its height, with side a, 10 inches, side b, unknown, and side c, 24 inches; inscribed in a semi-circle. enter image description here



      Now, I'm asked to find the area of the semi circle only, in terms of $pi$. I was already given the answer, which is $84.5pi -120 in^2$, but I don't understand how to get this conclusion.



      I tried finding the area this way, but I get a pretty different answer:
      $A=frac{pi r^2}{2}, r=12 inches$



      $$A=frac{144pi}{2}$$



      $$A=72pi in^2$$



      Then I know I have to subtract the triangle because I only want the area of the shaded region (the semi-circle), so



      $$10^2+B^2=24^2$$



      $$2sqrt{119}$$



      So I end up getting an answer of $A=72pi-2sqrt{119} in^2$ which is clearly false. Could anyone explain where I went wrong?







      geometry area






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      edited Dec 17 '18 at 13:16







      Lex_i

















      asked Dec 17 '18 at 12:46









      Lex_iLex_i

      707




      707






















          1 Answer
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          $begingroup$

          The question is poorly worded - it is not clear which side of the triangle is the longest (the hypotenuse).



          You are assuming that the 24 inch side of the triangle is the longest side and is therefore the diameter of the semi circle.



          The book answer is assuming that the unknown side of the triangle is the longest side. In this case the length of this side is $sqrt{10^2+24^2}=26$ inches, the radius of the semicircle is $13$ inches, the area of the triangle is $frac{10 times 24}{2} = 120$ square inches and the area of the semicircle outside of the triangle is



          $frac{13^2pi}{2}-120$ square inches.






          share|cite|improve this answer









          $endgroup$













          • $begingroup$
            Here is an image of the figure. ibb.co/2M2gwQG
            $endgroup$
            – Lex_i
            Dec 17 '18 at 13:03










          • $begingroup$
            @Lex_i Please include that in the question body rather posting it in a comment, and please use SE's built-in image upload because external links tend to be, in general, unstable.
            $endgroup$
            – GNUSupporter 8964民主女神 地下教會
            Dec 17 '18 at 13:11











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          1 Answer
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          active

          oldest

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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          1












          $begingroup$

          The question is poorly worded - it is not clear which side of the triangle is the longest (the hypotenuse).



          You are assuming that the 24 inch side of the triangle is the longest side and is therefore the diameter of the semi circle.



          The book answer is assuming that the unknown side of the triangle is the longest side. In this case the length of this side is $sqrt{10^2+24^2}=26$ inches, the radius of the semicircle is $13$ inches, the area of the triangle is $frac{10 times 24}{2} = 120$ square inches and the area of the semicircle outside of the triangle is



          $frac{13^2pi}{2}-120$ square inches.






          share|cite|improve this answer









          $endgroup$













          • $begingroup$
            Here is an image of the figure. ibb.co/2M2gwQG
            $endgroup$
            – Lex_i
            Dec 17 '18 at 13:03










          • $begingroup$
            @Lex_i Please include that in the question body rather posting it in a comment, and please use SE's built-in image upload because external links tend to be, in general, unstable.
            $endgroup$
            – GNUSupporter 8964民主女神 地下教會
            Dec 17 '18 at 13:11
















          1












          $begingroup$

          The question is poorly worded - it is not clear which side of the triangle is the longest (the hypotenuse).



          You are assuming that the 24 inch side of the triangle is the longest side and is therefore the diameter of the semi circle.



          The book answer is assuming that the unknown side of the triangle is the longest side. In this case the length of this side is $sqrt{10^2+24^2}=26$ inches, the radius of the semicircle is $13$ inches, the area of the triangle is $frac{10 times 24}{2} = 120$ square inches and the area of the semicircle outside of the triangle is



          $frac{13^2pi}{2}-120$ square inches.






          share|cite|improve this answer









          $endgroup$













          • $begingroup$
            Here is an image of the figure. ibb.co/2M2gwQG
            $endgroup$
            – Lex_i
            Dec 17 '18 at 13:03










          • $begingroup$
            @Lex_i Please include that in the question body rather posting it in a comment, and please use SE's built-in image upload because external links tend to be, in general, unstable.
            $endgroup$
            – GNUSupporter 8964民主女神 地下教會
            Dec 17 '18 at 13:11














          1












          1








          1





          $begingroup$

          The question is poorly worded - it is not clear which side of the triangle is the longest (the hypotenuse).



          You are assuming that the 24 inch side of the triangle is the longest side and is therefore the diameter of the semi circle.



          The book answer is assuming that the unknown side of the triangle is the longest side. In this case the length of this side is $sqrt{10^2+24^2}=26$ inches, the radius of the semicircle is $13$ inches, the area of the triangle is $frac{10 times 24}{2} = 120$ square inches and the area of the semicircle outside of the triangle is



          $frac{13^2pi}{2}-120$ square inches.






          share|cite|improve this answer









          $endgroup$



          The question is poorly worded - it is not clear which side of the triangle is the longest (the hypotenuse).



          You are assuming that the 24 inch side of the triangle is the longest side and is therefore the diameter of the semi circle.



          The book answer is assuming that the unknown side of the triangle is the longest side. In this case the length of this side is $sqrt{10^2+24^2}=26$ inches, the radius of the semicircle is $13$ inches, the area of the triangle is $frac{10 times 24}{2} = 120$ square inches and the area of the semicircle outside of the triangle is



          $frac{13^2pi}{2}-120$ square inches.







          share|cite|improve this answer












          share|cite|improve this answer



          share|cite|improve this answer










          answered Dec 17 '18 at 13:01









          gandalf61gandalf61

          8,076625




          8,076625












          • $begingroup$
            Here is an image of the figure. ibb.co/2M2gwQG
            $endgroup$
            – Lex_i
            Dec 17 '18 at 13:03










          • $begingroup$
            @Lex_i Please include that in the question body rather posting it in a comment, and please use SE's built-in image upload because external links tend to be, in general, unstable.
            $endgroup$
            – GNUSupporter 8964民主女神 地下教會
            Dec 17 '18 at 13:11


















          • $begingroup$
            Here is an image of the figure. ibb.co/2M2gwQG
            $endgroup$
            – Lex_i
            Dec 17 '18 at 13:03










          • $begingroup$
            @Lex_i Please include that in the question body rather posting it in a comment, and please use SE's built-in image upload because external links tend to be, in general, unstable.
            $endgroup$
            – GNUSupporter 8964民主女神 地下教會
            Dec 17 '18 at 13:11
















          $begingroup$
          Here is an image of the figure. ibb.co/2M2gwQG
          $endgroup$
          – Lex_i
          Dec 17 '18 at 13:03




          $begingroup$
          Here is an image of the figure. ibb.co/2M2gwQG
          $endgroup$
          – Lex_i
          Dec 17 '18 at 13:03












          $begingroup$
          @Lex_i Please include that in the question body rather posting it in a comment, and please use SE's built-in image upload because external links tend to be, in general, unstable.
          $endgroup$
          – GNUSupporter 8964民主女神 地下教會
          Dec 17 '18 at 13:11




          $begingroup$
          @Lex_i Please include that in the question body rather posting it in a comment, and please use SE's built-in image upload because external links tend to be, in general, unstable.
          $endgroup$
          – GNUSupporter 8964民主女神 地下教會
          Dec 17 '18 at 13:11


















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