Find the maximum area of an isosceles triangle inscribed in the ellipse x^2/a^2+y^2/b^2=1.

posader86

posader86

Answered question

2022-07-16

Find the maximum area of an isosceles triangle inscribed in the ellipse x 2 a 2 + y 2 b 2 = 1.
Find the maximum area of an isosceles triangle inscribed in the ellipse x 2 / a 2 + y 2 / b 2 = 1. My teacher solved it by considering two arbitrary points on the ellipse to be vertices of the triangle, being ( a cos θ , b sin θ ) and ( a cos θ , b sin θ ). (Let's just say θ is theta) and then proceeded with the derivative tests(which i understood) But, he didn't indicate what our θ was,and declared that these points always lie on an ellipse. Why so? And even if they do, what's the guarantee that points of such a form will be our required vertices? One more thing, I'd appreciate it if you could suggest another way of solving this problem.

Answer & Explanation

emerhelienapj

emerhelienapj

Beginner2022-07-17Added 14 answers

Step 1
If we believe the symmetry argument, it is a simple matter to optimize area:
A 1 = a b sin θ ( 1 + cos θ )
A 2 = a b ( 1 + sin θ ) cos θ
0 = A 1 θ = a b [ cos θ ( 1 + cos θ ) sin 2 θ ] = a b [ cos 2 θ sin 2 θ + cos θ ]
0 = A 2 θ = a b [ cos 2 θ sin θ ( 1 + sin θ ) ] = a b [ cos 2 θ sin 2 θ sin θ ]
Step 2
Solutions to the first equation include a minimum at θ = π and maxima at θ = π 3 .
Interesting, we get solutions aligned with the x-axis and the y-axis!
You can certainly solve the problem taking three arbitrary points on the ellipse, constraining them to lie on iscoceles triangles, and then use Lagrange multipliers. The solutions will turn out to be those found above.

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