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Activity 2-13: Triangle Centres www.carom-maths.co.uk

Activity 2-13: Triangle Centres

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Page 1: Activity 2-13: Triangle Centres

Activity 2-13: Triangle Centres

www.carom-maths.co.uk

Page 2: Activity 2-13: Triangle Centres

Take any quadrilateral.

Is it possible to draw a circle through the

four vertices?

Clearly this is not always possible. It turns out that such a circle is possible

if and only if opposite angles of the

quadrilateral add to 180o.

Task: can you prove this?

Page 3: Activity 2-13: Triangle Centres

It IS possible, however, to draw a circle through the corners of any triangle.

Proof: given a triangle ABC, consider the locus of points equidistant from A and B.

This will be the perpendicular bisector of AB.

Now add the perpendicular bisector of AC.

The point where they meet is equidistant from A and B, and from A and C, and thus from A, B and C.

Page 4: Activity 2-13: Triangle Centres

This is then the centre of a circle through A,B and C,

the circumcircle.

We call D the circumcentre of the triangle.

Are there any other centres that a triangle can have? There are lots!The Encyclopedia of Triangle Centres website

currently lists 5374 different ones.

The circumcentre is Number 3 on the list.

Page 5: Activity 2-13: Triangle Centres

Now for Centre Number 2 on the list…

A line joining a corner to the

opposite mid-pointis called a median,

and the three medians appear

to be concurrent.

Can we prove this?

Task: in Geogebra, take a triangle, and join each corner to the midpoint of the opposite side.

Now drag a corner…

Page 6: Activity 2-13: Triangle Centres

It helps to know a bit about vectors...

So now we can come up with our proof:

Page 7: Activity 2-13: Triangle Centres

The line CD is

r = d+(1-)c = (a+b)/2+(1-)c.

Now put = 2/3, and we have the point (a + b + c)/3,

which is on CD.

Now by symmetry, this point must also lie on the other two medians,

and is thus the centroid of the triangle.

The centroid always lies inside the triangle, and is its centre of gravity.

Page 8: Activity 2-13: Triangle Centres

Task: using Geogebra, pick a triangle and draw the perpendicular from each corner to the opposite side.

What do you find?

We will now consider Centre 4 on the list…

It seems the three perpendicularsalways meet: we call this point

the orthocentre (Centre 4).

Can we prove this?

Page 9: Activity 2-13: Triangle Centres

Vectors again prove to be useful…

For two vectors a and b, the scalar product is defined to be a.b = |a||b|cos , where is the angle between a and b.

Three things:clearly a.b = 0 if and only if

a and b are at right angles.

Secondly, you CAN multiply out a.(b + c) to give a.b + a.c (the distributive law).

Thirdly, a.b = b.a (the commutative law).

Page 10: Activity 2-13: Triangle Centres

Multiplying out, we get

Her we have that (a – d).(b – c)=0.

We also have that (c – d).(b – a) = 0.

a.b + c.d – a.c – b.d = 0, a.d + b.c – b.d – a.c = 0.

Subtracting these gives a.b + c.d – a.d – b.c = 0,

and so (a – c)(b – d) = 0, and BD is perpendicular to AC, and so the three perpendiculars meet at a point.

Page 11: Activity 2-13: Triangle Centres

One more remarkable thing: these three centres for a triangle always lie on a straight line.

This is called the Euler line, after the Swiss mathematician who first proved this fact in 1765.

So P (the circumcentre)Q (the centroid)

and R (the orthocentre)are collinear,

ANDQR = 2PQ.

Tough to prove!

Page 12: Activity 2-13: Triangle Centres

With thanks to:Wikipedia, for another helpful article.

Carom is written by Jonny Griffiths, [email protected]