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The diagonals of a rectangle are both 10 and intersect at (0,0). Calculate the area of this rectangle, knowing that all of its vertices belong to the curve $y=\frac{12}{x}$.

At first I thought it would be easy - a rectanlge with vertices of (-a, b), (a, b), (-a, -b) and (a, -b). However, as I spotted no mention about the rectangle sides being perpendicular to the axises, it's obviously wrong which caused me to get stuck. I thought that maybe we could move in a similar way - we know that if a rectangle is somehow rotated (and we need to take that into account), the distances from the Y axis from the points being symmetric to (0,0) are still just two variables. So we would have: (-b, -12/b), (a, 12/a), (-a, -12/a), (b, 12/b). I then tried to calculate the distance between the first two and the second and the third which I could then use along with the Pythagorean theorem and a diagonal. However, the distance between the first two is $\sqrt{(a+b)^2+(\frac{12}{a}+\frac{12}{b})^2}$ which is unfriendly enough to make me thing it's a wrong way. Could you please help me?

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    Take an arbitrary line through the origin: $y=mx$. Find the intersection with your given hyperbola. Figure out what $m$ should be so that the distance from the origin is $5$ (the diagonals of a rectangle bisect each other, remember?).2012-05-03

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As in J.M.'s comment, the diagonals of a rectangle (any parallelogram, in fact) bisect each other, so we're looking for points on $y=\frac{12}{x}$ that are a distance of $5$ from the origin. That is, we want solutions to the system $\left\{\begin{matrix} y=\frac{12}{x}\\ x^2+y^2=5^2 \end{matrix}\right..$ By substituting for $y$ in the second equation, $\begin{align} &&x^2+\left(\frac{12}{x}\right)^2&=25 \\ &\implies&x^2+\frac{144}{x^2}&=25 \\ &\implies&x^4+144&=25x^2 \\ &\implies&x^4-25x^2+144&=0 \\ &\implies&(x^2-9)(x^2-16)&=0 \\ &\implies&(x-3)(x+3)(x-4)(x+4)&=0 \\ &\implies&x=\pm3\text{ or }\pm4 \end{align}$ Using $y=\frac{12}{x}$ gives the corresponding $y$-coordinates for each of the 4 points, from which the side lengths and area can be computed.

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    OK, thank you very much, I get it :)2012-05-04
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To follow J.M.'s hint, you need to solve the two equations $ \eqalign{ x^2+y^2&=25\\ xy&=12 } $ and a nice way to do this would be to notice that then $ \left(x+y\right)^2=x^2+2xy+y^2=25+2\cdot12=49 $ so that $x+y=\pm7$. Next, if you note that $ \left(x-y\right)^2=x^2-2xy+y^2=25-2\cdot12=1 $ you will see that $x-y=\pm1$. This gives us the system $ \eqalign{ x+y&=\pm7\\ x-y&=\pm1 } $ From which we can add or subtract, then divide by two, to get $ x,y=\pm\frac{7\pm1}{2}=\pm3,\pm4 $ from which we can work out the combination of signs (in the first and third quadrants) that satisfy the equations above: $ \{(3,4),(4,3),(-3,-4),(-4,-3)\} $ Since the (within- and between-quadrant) sides of the rectangle are $\sqrt{1^2+1^2}=\sqrt2$ and $\sqrt{7^2+7^2}=7\sqrt2$, the area is their product, $A = \sqrt2\cdot7\sqrt2 = 14\,.$