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In Mathematics / High School | 2014-01-15

A park is in the shape of a rectangle 2 miles long and 1.5 miles wide. How much shorter is it if you walk diagonally across the park rather than along two sides?

Asked by smendoza

Answer (2)

You can answer this by using Pythagoras theorem. Okay, let me draw this first.
2 miles V

| | | | | | << 1.5 miles |_______________________|
^ Assume this is the rectangle. The long side is 2 miles while the shorter side is 1.5 miles.
So, to get the shortest distance, let's cut out a triangle from the rectangle.
/| / | / | What we want to find is this one > / | << 2 miles / | /______| ^ 1.5 miles (I know the size is not logical,but imagine it please)
So to get the diagonal length = a 2 + b 2 ​ = 2 2 + 1. 5 2 ​ = 2.5 miles
To calculate how much shorter = ( 2 miles + 1.5 miles) - 2.5 miles = 3.5 miles - 2.5 miles = 1.0 miles
Hope this help !

Answered by Anonymous | 2024-06-10

Walking diagonally across the park (2 miles by 1.5 miles) measures 2.5 miles according to the Pythagorean theorem. In contrast, walking along the two sides covers 3.5 miles. Therefore, walking diagonally saves you 1 mile.
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Answered by Anonymous | 2024-12-26