This solution is by Anthony of Prince Henry's High School, Evesham.
Well done Anthony.
I viewed the ladder as a line, cutting the $x$ axis at $x = a$ and
the $y$ axis at $y = b$, passing through the point $(1,1)$ with $a$
and $b$ such that $a^2 + b^2 = 16$ by Pythagoras theorem. The
gradient of the line is $- b/a$ (the change in $y$ divided by the
change in $x$). As $a =\sqrt{16-b^2}$, the gradient is
$\frac{-b}{\sqrt(16 - b^2)}.$ The equation of the line of the
ladder is:
| $$y = (-b/\sqrt(16 - b^2))x + b.$$ When $x = 1, \ y
= 1$ we have $$ 1 = (-b /\sqrt(16 - b^2)) + b$$ and hence $$b^4 -
2b^3 - 14b^2 + 32 b -16 = 0.$$ |
 |
This can be solved using a numerical search method (such as
interval halving) to give the approximate solutions $b = 1.36$ and
$3.76$ (to $2$ decimal places). These are the two possible heights
of the top of the ladder. In each case, if one value is the height
of the top of the ladder, the other value is the distance of the
foot of the ladder from the wall.
Alternatively, the gradient is $-b/a = (1 - b)/(1 - 0)$, hence
$ab = a + b $. Using the fact that $a^2 + b^2 = 16$ this gives
$$(ab)^2 = (a + b)^2 = a^2 + 2ab + b^2 = 16 + 2ab.$$ Hence $$(ab)^2
- 2ab - 16 = 0.$$ Solving this equation gives $ab = 1 \pm
\sqrt{17}$. As $a$ and $b$ are positive the solution here is $ab =
1 + \sqrt {17}$. We are looking for $a$ and $b$ and we know the sum
$a + b$ and the product $ab$ are both equal to $1 + \sqrt{17}$. We
can write down a quadratic equation with these roots and solve it.
Hence $a$ and $b$ are the roots of $$x^2 - (1 + \sqrt{17})x + (1 +
\sqrt{17}) = 0.$$
Solving this equation using the quadratic formula gives the
values $3.7609$ and $1.3622$ (to $4$ decimal places). There are two
solutions, one with the ladder at a steeper angle (it turns out to
be approximately $70$ degrees) and the other at approximately $20$
degrees.
Yet another method uses numerical approximation. Taking the
angle of the ladder with the ground to be $\theta$, then $a = 4
\cos \theta$ and $b = 4 \sin \theta$. Set up a spreadsheet or a
program to evaluate $ab - (a + b)$ and use an interval halving
method to find value of $\theta$ for which $ab - (a + b)$ is close
enough to zero to give the values of $a$ and $b$ to sufficient
accuracy.