Two solutions to this problem have been
forthcoming from different students at the same school - Madras
College. Thank you to Mike and Euan who used lots of trigonometry
as well as to Thom who likewise resorted to double angles and the
cosine rule and reduced the problem to solving a quadratic
equation. Thom was also able to show the significance of the two
roots.
Can anyone find an alternative solution
using only Pythagoras' theorem?
$$\eqalign{ \beta &=& \frac{\pi}{6} - \frac{\alpha}{2} \\
\cos\beta &=&
\frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}\cdot\frac{3\sqrt{3}}{2\sqrt{7}} +
\frac{1}{2}\cdot\frac{1}{2\sqrt{7}} \\ \; &=&
\frac{10}{4\sqrt{7}} = \frac{5}{2\sqrt{7}}}$$
Using the cosine rule on $\triangle ABP$ $$\eqalign{ 4 &=&
x^2 + 7 - 2x\sqrt{7}\cos\beta \\ \; &=& x^2 + 7 - 5x}$$
Therefore $x^2 - 5x + 3 = 0$ $$x = \frac{5\pm\sqrt{13}}{2}$$ Both
solutions satisfy the triangle inequality for $\triangle ABP$,
namely $\sqrt{7} - 2 < x < \sqrt{7} + 2$. The diagram can be
redrawn to show the trapezium $BPQC$ flipped down producing the
much smaller equilateral triangle of side $x$ units.