a wire cut into 2 pieces

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a wire cut into 2 pieces

by Olga Lapina » Sun Feb 23, 2014 7:07 am
Dear friends, is it possible to make a good guess in this question?

A thin piece ow wire 40 meters long is cut into two pieces. One piece is used to form a circle with radius R, and the other is used to form a square. No wire is left over. Which of the following represents the total area, in square meters, of the circular and the square regions in terms of R?

1. π*R^2
2. π*R^2 + 10
3. π*R^2 + 1/4 * π^2*R^2
4. π*R^2 + (40 - 2*π*R^2)^2
5. π*R^2 + (10 - 1/2 * π*R)^2

answer is E
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by Brent@GMATPrepNow » Sun Feb 23, 2014 7:09 am
A thin piece of 40 meters long is cut into two pieces. One piece is used to form a circle with radius r, and the other is used to form a square. No wire is left over. Which of the following represents the total area, in square meters, of the circular and the square regions in term of r?

A)(pi)r²
B)(pi)r² + 10
C)(pi)r² + 1/4([pi]² * r²)
D)(pi)r² + (40 - 2[pi] * r)²
E)(pi)r² + (10 - 1/2[pi] * r)²
One approach is to plug in a value for r and see what the output should be.

Let's say r = 0. That is, the radius of the circle = 0
This means, we use the entire 40-meter length of wire to create the square.
So, the 4 sides of this square will have length 10, which means the area = 100

So, when r = 0, the total area = 100

We'll now plug r = 0 into the 5 answer choices and see which one yields an output of 100

A) (pi)(0²) = 0 NOPE
B) (pi)(0²) + 10 = 10 NOPE
C) (pi)(0²) + 1/4([pi]² * 0²) = 0 NOPE
D) (pi)(0²) + (40 - 2[pi]0)² = 1600 NOPE
E) (pi)(0²) + (10 - 1/2[pi](0))² = 100 PERFECT!

Answer: E

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by Brent@GMATPrepNow » Sun Feb 23, 2014 7:09 am
A thin piece of 40 meters long is cut into two pieces. One piece is used to form a circle with radius r, and the other is used to form a square. No wire is left over. Which of the following represents the total area, in square meters, of the circular and the square regions in term of r?

A)(pi)r²
B)(pi)r² + 10
C)(pi)r² + 1/4([pi]² * r²)
D)(pi)r² + (40 - 2[pi] * r)²
E)(pi)r² + (10 - 1/2[pi] * r)²
Here's an algebraic approach:

Since r is the radius of the circle, the area of the circle will be (pi)r²

If r is the radius of the circle, the length of wire used for this circle will equal its circumference which is 2(pi)r

So, the length of wire to be used for the square must equal 40 - 2(pi)r

In other words, the perimeter of the square will be 40 - 2(pi)r

Since squares have 4 equal sides, the length of each side of the square will be [40 - 2(pi)r]/4, which simplifies to be 10 - (pi)r/2

If each side of the square has length 10 - (pi)r/2, the area of the square will be [10 - (pi)r/2]²

So, the total area will equal (pi)r² + [10 - (pi)r/2]², which is the same as E

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by [email protected] » Sun Feb 23, 2014 10:12 am
Hi Olga Lapina,

Since your original question was about how to take a good guess on this question, here's some perspective...

The question asks for the TOTAL area of the circular and square regions. We're clearly going to be adding two numbers together, so we'd likely need an answer that fits that format. Eliminate A (it's just the area of a circle).

Since we don't know what the area of the square is (and since it will change depending on how much of the wire we put into the square's perimeter), it seems unlikely that the area would be exactly 10. Eliminate B.

You could then guess from the remaining 3 options.

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