OG 13 DS #128

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OG 13 DS #128

by bml1105 » Thu May 01, 2014 7:52 pm
The hypotenuse of a right triangle is 10 cm. What is the perimeter, in cm, of the triangle?

(1)The area of the triangle is 25cm^2

(2) The two legs of the triangle are equal lengths



Correct Answer: D
Source: — Data Sufficiency |

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by Tushar14 » Thu May 01, 2014 8:03 pm
Lets assume two sides as X and Y, and from question hypotenuse is 10.

From 1:- Area = XY/2 = 25 or, XY = 50
As per Pyth theorem ; 100 = X^2 + Y^2

Perimeter P = X + Y + 10 so we have to calculate the value x+y.
Square x+y --> (x+y)^2=x^2+2xy+y^2=(x^2+y^2)+2xy=100+2*50=200 --> x+y=\sqrt{200}.

Thus P=x+y+10=\sqrt{200}+10.

Sufficient.

Statement 2 is sufficient as well.

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by Tushar14 » Thu May 01, 2014 8:09 pm
Just to add this problem doesn't require solving or math.

Stat 1:- X^2 + Y^2 =100

Also XY/2 = 25
So solving for X, Y from two equations its sufficient.

Stat 2:- As X, Y are equal
so X^2 + X^2 = 100, so 2X^2 = 100, X^2 = 50, which is sufficient enough as well.

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by Brent@GMATPrepNow » Thu May 01, 2014 8:11 pm
bml1105 wrote:The hypotenuse of a right triangle is 10 cm. What is the perimeter, in cm, of the triangle?

(1)The area of the triangle is 25 square centimeters
(2) The two legs of the triangle are equal lengths
IMPORTANT: For geometry DS questions, we are typically checking to see whether the statements "lock" a particular angle or length into having just one value. This concept is discussed in much greater detail in our free video: https://www.gmatprepnow.com/module/gmat- ... cy?id=1103

So, for this question, if a statement FORCES our right triangle into having ONE AND ONLY ONE shape and size, then that statement is sufficient. Moreover, we NEED NOT find the actual perimeter of the triangle. We need only recognize that we could find its perimeter (finding the perimeter will just waste time).

Okay, onto the question....

Target question: What is the perimeter of the right triangle?

Given: The hypotenuse of the triangle has length 10 cm.

Statement 1: The area of the triangle is 25 square centimeters.
Let's let x = length of one leg
Also, let y = length of other leg
So, if the area is 25, we can write (1/2)xy = 25 [since area = (1/2)(base)(height)]
Multiply both sides by 2 to get xy = 50
Multiply both sides by 2 again to get 2xy = 100 [you'll soon see why I performed this step]


Now let's deal with the given information (hypotenuse has length 10)
The Pythagorean Theorem tells us that x² + y² = 10²
In other words, x² + y² = 100

We now have two equations:
2xy = 100
x² + y² = 100

Since both equations are set equal to 100, we can write: 2xy = x² + y²

Rearrange this to get x² - 2xy + y² = 0
Factor to get (x - y)(x - y) = 0
This means that x =y, which means that the two legs of our right triangle HAVE EQUAL LENGTH.

So, the two legs of our right triangle have equal length AND the hypotenuse has length 10.
There is only one such right triangle in the universe, so statement 1 FORCES our right triangle into having ONE AND ONLY ONE shape and size.

This means that statement 1 is SUFFICIENT

Statement 2: The 2 legs of the triangle are of equal length
We already covered this scenario in statement 1.
So, statement 2 is also SUFFICIENT

Answer = D

Cheers,
Brent
Brent Hanneson - Creator of GMATPrepNow.com
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