SOLUTION: A garden area is 30ft long and 20ft wide. A path of uniform width is set around the edge. If the remaining garden area is 400ft, what is the width of the path?
400 = 30^2 x 20
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-> SOLUTION: A garden area is 30ft long and 20ft wide. A path of uniform width is set around the edge. If the remaining garden area is 400ft, what is the width of the path?
400 = 30^2 x 20
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Question 121113: A garden area is 30ft long and 20ft wide. A path of uniform width is set around the edge. If the remaining garden area is 400ft, what is the width of the path?
400 = 30^2 x 20^2
400 = 900 x 400
400 = 36,000
Am I on the right track for the kind of problem? Answer by ankor@dixie-net.com(22740) (Show Source):
You can put this solution on YOUR website! A garden area is 30 ft long and 20 ft wide. A path of uniform width is set around the edge. If the remaining garden area is 400 ft^2, what is the width of the path?
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I am not sure what you are doing here, here is how I would do itl
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Draw diagram of this; label the outside dimensions of the rectangle 30 by 20.
Label the width of the path as x, it will be apparent that the dimensions of
the garden (inside the path), will be (30-2x) by (20-2x)
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The area of the garden is given as 400 sq/ft
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A simple area equation:
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length times width = 400 sq/ft
(30-2x) * (20-2x) = 400
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FOIL:
600 - 60x - 40x + 4x^2 = 400
4x^2 - 100x + 600 = 400
4x^2 - 100x + 600 - 400 = 0
4x^2 - 100x + 200 = 0; a quadratic equation
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Simplify, divide by 4 and you have:
x^2 - 25x + 50 = 0
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We need to use the quadratic formula to solve this: a=1; b=-25;; c=50
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:
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Two solutions:
x = 22.8, not a possible solution, obviously
and
x = 2.19 ft is the width of the path
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Check our solution by finding the area of the garden
We have to subtract 2x from the outside dimensions: 2*2.19 = 4.38
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(30-4.38) * (20-4.38) =
25.62 * 15.62 = 400.2 ~ 400 sq/ft
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How about this, did it make sense to you, any questions?