Problem #DES-111025

Descriptions

Problem

When Robinson Crusoe was stranded on his island, he found a goat and decided to keep it. To stop the goat from running away, he tied it to a peg in the ground with a rope. The goat wandered around happily, eating all the grass it could reach until the rope pulled tight. For example, Robinson noticed that with just one peg and one rope of length \(5\) meters, the grazed area was exactly a circle of radius \(5\) meters!

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In this sheet we will explore what shapes the goat can graze when Robinson uses pegs, ropes, and even small sliding rings in slightly more complicated positions. In mathematics, the shape made by all points that satisfy a condition is called a locus (plural: loci). In our problems, the locus of the goat is the area it can graze. Before we begin, here are the rules of the game:

We will treat the goat as a single point, and the rope as a fixed length that cannot stretch, so the goat can graze any point it can reach before the rope is tight. A peg is simply a point in the ground that does not move. Let’s see some more interesting examples: