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I'm stuck on the following Calculus problem..
A tangent is drawn to the ellipse
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Hi Fruityloop;
I don't understand what will be nine units?
In mathematics, you don't understand things. You just get used to them.
If it ain't broke, fix it until it is.
Always satisfy the Prime Directive of getting the right answer above all else.
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The 9 units is the length from coordinate axis to coordinate axis I believe.
This is apparently the minimum length for all of the possible tangents to the ellipse.
I don't know how to prove this.
I can get the slope of the tangent to the ellipse but then I'm stuck.
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so that the part intercepted by the coordinate axes is a minimum.
My interpretation of this is:
Let T be line tangent to the ellipse. Set a to be the x-intercept and b to be the y-intercept of T. Now set d to be the distance between a and b, or infinity if one of the intercepts does not exist.
Minimize d.
Is that right?
"In the real world, this would be a problem. But in mathematics, we can just define a place where this problem doesn't exist. So we'll go ahead and do that now..."
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OK! I finally got the answer!
The key is to make a little rectangle underneath the ellipse, where the upper right corner touches the ellipse at the point of tangency.
In this case, I called the part from the rectangle up to where the tangent intercepts the y-axis, h.
I called the part from the rectangle to where the tangent intercepts the x-axis, b.
The slope of the tangent to the ellipse is
Last edited by Fruityloop (2010-01-07 01:35:38)
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umm i see where you are coming from, but i could not follow your working, i have got the same question and it is giving me all kinds of headaches, can you possibly explain it alittle clearer?
Thanks
. .
.
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This is not that tough but it is a good problem. Here goes:
The tangent on point (a, b) of the ellipse is: xa/25 +yb/16 =1 which intercepts axes at (0, 16/b) and (25/a, 0).
Hence the intercept between axes of this tangent is: (25/a)² + (16/b)²
Therefore the problem is: Minimize √ ((25/a)² + (16/b)²) subject to (a/5)² + (b/4)² = 1.
Let's substitute (a/5)² = c and (b/4)² = d.
Then the problem is: Minimize ((25/c) + (16/d))² subject to c + d = 1.
Hence the problem is: Minimize 25/c + 16/(1-c) (dropping the square).
Differentiating wrt c and placing = 0, we get: 5/ c = 4/(1-c) so that c = 5/9 and d = 4/9.
Therefore, intercept = √ (25/c + 16/(d)) = = √(45 + 36) = √(81) = 9.
Also, the point is: a = 5√5/3, b = 4√4/3 reversing the substitution for c and d.
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