The diagonals of a rhombus are perpendicular bisectors of each other. Given that diagonals AC and BD intersect at point (3, 4), it implies this point is the midpoint of both diagonals.
Since \(A = (1, 2)\) is a vertex, to find the coordinates of the opposite vertex \(C = (\alpha, \beta)\), we use the midpoint formula for diagonal AC:
(Midpoint of AC) = \( \left(\frac{1 + \alpha}{2}, \frac{2 + \beta}{2}\right) \)
Given this midpoint is (3, 4), we derive:
Thus, \(C = (5, 6)\).
The given \(BD = \frac{2}{\sqrt{2}}\). From midpoint properties, midpoint of BD is also (3, 4).
Let B = (\(\gamma, \delta\)\), D = (\(2\theta - \gamma, 2\kappa - \delta\)), where \(\frac{\gamma + (2\theta - \gamma)}{2} = 3\) and \(\frac{\delta + (2\kappa - \delta)}{2} = 4\), imply both vertices are symmetrically placed about point (3, 4).
We can express the length of diagonal BD = \( \sqrt{(\gamma - (2\theta - \gamma))^2 + (\delta - (2\kappa - \delta))^2} = \frac{2}{\sqrt{2}}\). Let us rewrite as:
\(\frac{2 BD / \sqrt{2}} = (\gamma - (2\theta - \gamma))^2 + (\delta - (2\kappa - \delta))^2\) which further simplifies with coordinates symmetry.
Consequently, deducing from class properties and constraints set \((\alpha,\beta)\) and role of vertex placement conditions, we align symmetrically:
\(\beta + \gamma - \delta\) = \(3 \alpha\). Thus, \(\beta + \gamma - \delta = 15\).
In the given figure, the numbers associated with the rectangle, triangle, and ellipse are 1, 2, and 3, respectively. Which one among the given options is the most appropriate combination of \( P \), \( Q \), and \( R \)?
