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The length of each side of a square is 3 in. more than the length of each side of a smaller square. The sum of the areas of the squares is 65 in squared . Find the lengths of the sides of the two squares.

2 Answers

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Answer:

4 inch and 7 inch

Explanation:

Let the length of the smaller square=l

Since the length of each side of a square is 3 in. more than the length of each side of a smaller square,

Length of the bigger square=l+3

Area of Smaller Square=l²

Area of Larger Square=(l+3)²

The sum of their areas is 65 inch squared

Therefore: l²+(l+3)²=65

l²+(l+3)(l+3)=65

l²+l²+3l+3l+9=65

2l²+6l+9-65=0

2l²+6l-56=0

2l²+14l-8l-56=0

2l(l+7)-8(l+7)=0

(2l-8)(l+7)=0

2l-8=0 or l+7=0

l=4 or -7

l= 4 inch

The length of the larger square is (4 +3) inch =7 inch

User Kirill Yunussov
by
5.8k points
1 vote

Answer:


L_1 = 4

And
L_2 = 3 +4 = 7

Explanation:

For this case we assume that for the first square we have the following dimensions:


A_1 = L^2_1

And we know that:


L_2 = 3 + L_1

And the area for the second square would be:


A_2 = L^2_2 = (3+L_1)^2 = 9 + 6L_1 + L^2_1

And we know that the sum of areas is 65 so then we have this:


A_1 + A_2 = 65

And replacing we got:


L^2_1 + 9 + 6L_1 + L^2_1 = 65


2L^2_1 +6L_1 - 56=0

We can divide the last expression by 2 and we got:


L^2_1 + 3L_1 -28=0

And we can factorize the last expression like this:


(L_1 + 7) (L_1 -4) =0

And we have two solutions for
L_1 and we got:


L_1 = 4, L_1 = -7

Since the length can't be negative we have this:


L_1 = 4

And
L_2 = 3 +4 = 7

User Abhinav Upadhyay
by
6.4k points