Two opposite sides of a parallelogram each have a length of #16 #. If one corner of the parallelogram has an angle of #(5 pi)/12 # and the parallelogram's area is #64 #, how long are the other two sides?

1 Answer
Nov 27, 2016

The other two sides each have length #4(sqrt6-sqrt2)#.

Explanation:

Since the area of a triangle can be written as #A_triangle=1/2ab sinC#, a parallelogram that is made up of two identical triangles has area #A=2times1/2ab sinC=ab sinC#.

If we know 3 of these variables, we can solve for the 4th.

#A=ab sinC#

#=>64=16bsin((5pi)/12)#

#=>(""^4cancel(64))/(""^1cancel(16)sin((5pi)/12))=b#

#=>4/((sqrt6+sqrt2)//4)=b#

#=>b=16/(sqrt6+sqrt2)color(brown)(*(sqrt6-sqrt2)/(sqrt6-sqrt2))#         (rationalize)

#=>b=(16(sqrt6-sqrt2))/(6-2)#

#=>b=(""^4cancel(16)(sqrt6-sqrt2))/(""^1cancel(4))#

#=>b=4(sqrt6-sqrt2)#

So the other two sides have length #b=4(sqrt6-sqrt2)#.

Bonus:

It doesn't matter if the angle that we know is the acute one or the obtuse one. In a parallelogram, any two adjacent angles are supplementary (they add to 180°, or #pi# radians), and we know that

#sintheta=sin(pi-theta)#.