How to maximize the area of a triangle, given two sides?

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I am having a question that is it possible to find what will be the maximum area of a triangle if suppose we know any two of the sides and none of the angles? We don't know whether one of these sides is the largest or not.

Can anyone answer considering the two given sides to be m and n?

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Well, let $\theta$ be the angle between the sides of length $m$ and $n$. Then, by the are formula $S = \frac12\sin\theta mn$ gives that area is less than or equal to $\frac12mn$

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If you draw a triangle and label sides a b and c, then you can apply the Law of Cosines. Given any 2 sides a and b, angle C (or gamma) is necessarily between a and b. By applying this, you can solve for side c.

Once you have sides a b and c, you can apply Heron's Formula to find the area of the triangle. You may also be able to use geometry to find the base and height of the triangle.

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It's easy to answer the question just remembering that the area of a triangle is base $\times$ height divided by $2$. Fix one side as the base, and rotate the other side... when is the height (and thus area) of the triangle maximal? When the other side is at $90$ degrees from the first, in which case you have a right triangle with an area equal to half the product of the two starting sides.

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Here is an image to complement the classic answer given in Anonymous's response:

enter image description here

The horizontal black line segment is the initial fixed side.

The length of the second side is the radius of the red circle. All possible triangles with sides of these respective lengths can be generated by these radii; three examples are given in the picture: one in blue, one in green, and one in black. In each case, the base $\times$ height formula has the same base, and one sees that the height is greatest when the two line segments are perpendicular to one another.