2010 CEMC Gauss (Grade 8) Problems/Problem 5
Problem
The area of a rectangle is . Each of its side lengths is a whole number. What is the smallest possible perimeter of this rectangle?
Solution 1
The product of the side lengths of the rectangle is its area. Because we know both are integers, we can look at the factor pairs of . The numbers in the pairs will represent the side lengths of each rectangle, and we can find the area.
The factor pairs of are
,
, and
.
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Let be the perimeter of each rectangle. For
, the perimeter is then:
For , the perimeter is:
For , the perimeter is:
~anabel.disher
Solution 1.5
We can notice that the rectangle with the smallest perimeter will be the one whose side length sum is the smallest. We can show this through the formula for the perimeter of the rectangle:
To minimize the perimeter, will have to be minimized. Using the same process with the factor pairs, we can see that
has the lowest sum. This means that we can simply find the perimeter of that rectangle without needing to calculate the perimeter of the other ones.
~anabel.disher