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Trapezoid

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Well if you think about it the formula for a trapezoid is actually the same formula as a square. The formula for a square is zxx=12345555555.666662847372883m2 But the formula for a trapezoid is dxx=12345555555.666662847372833m2 dxx is the same thing as zxx because they both equal pi which is 3.1415926535897962927282937466482901928374663627624263735275251722022537462&2738473837383828298373738382873838373738.

Etymology

The term trapezium has been in use in English since 1570, from Late Latin trapezium, from Greek τραπέζιον (trapézion), literally "a little table", a diminutive of τράπεζα (trápeza), "a table", itself from τετράς (tetrás), "four" + πέζα (péza), "a foot, an edge". The first recorded use of the Greek word translated trapezoid (τραπεζοειδή, trapezoeidé, "table-like") was by Marinus Proclus (412 to 485 AD) in his Commentary on the first book of Euclid's Elements.[1]

This article uses the term trapezoid in the sense that is current in the United States and Canada. In many other languages using a word derived from the Greek for this figure, the form closest to trapezium (e.g. French trapèze, Italian trapezio, Spanish trapecio, German Trapez, Russian трапеция) is used.

Special cases

Trapezoid special cases

A right trapezoid (also called right-angled trapezoid) has two adjacent right angles.[2] Right trapezoids are used in the trapezoidal rule for estimating areas under a curve.

An acute trapezoid has two adjacent acute angles on its longer base edge, while an obtuse trapezoid has one acute and one obtuse angle on each base.

An acute trapezoid is also an isosceles trapezoid, if its sides (legs) have the same length, and the base angles have the same measure. It has reflection symmetry.

An obtuse trapezoid with two pairs of parallel sides is a parallelogram. A parallelogram has central 2-fold rotational symmetry (or point reflection symmetry).

There is some disagreement whether parallelograms, which have two pairs of parallel sides, should be regarded as trapezoids. Some define a trapezoid as a quadrilateral having only one pair of parallel sides (the exclusive definition), thereby excluding parallelograms.[3] Others[2] define a trapezoid as a quadrilateral with at least one pair of parallel sides (the inclusive definition[4]), making the parallelogram a special type of trapezoid. The latter definition is consistent with its uses in higher mathematics such as calculus. The former definition would make such concepts as the trapezoidal approximation to a definite integral ill-defined. This article uses the inclusive definition and considers parallelograms as special cases of a trapezoid. This is also advocated in the taxonomy of quadrilaterals.

Under the inclusive definition, all parallelograms (including rhombuses, rectangles and squares) are trapezoids. Rectangles have mirror symmetry on mid-edges; rhombuses have mirror symmetry on vertices, while squares have mirror symmetry on both mid-edges and vertices.

A Saccheri quadrilateral is similar to a trapezoid in the hyperbolic plane, with two adjacent right angles, while it is a rectangle in the Euclidean plane. A Lambert quadrilateral in the hyperbolic plane has 3 right angles.

A tangential trapezoid is a trapezoid that has an incircle.

Characterizations

Given a convex quadrilateral, the following properties are equivalent, and each implies that the quadrilateral is a trapezoid:

  • It has two adjacent angles that are supplementary, that is, they add up to 180 degrees.
  • The angle between a side and a diagonal is equal to the angle between the opposite side and the same diagonal.
  • The diagonals cut each other in mutually the same ratio (this ratio is the same as that between the lengths of the parallel sides).
  • The diagonals cut the quadrilateral into four triangles of which one opposite pair are similar.
  • The diagonals cut the quadrilateral into four triangles of which one opposite pair have equal areas.[5]: Prop.5 
  • The product of the areas of the two triangles formed by one diagonal equals the product of the areas of the two triangles formed by the other diagonal.[5]: Thm.6 
  • The areas S and T of some two opposite triangles of the four triangles formed by the diagonals satisfy the equation
where K is the area of the quadrilateral.[5]: Thm.8 
  • The midpoints of two opposite sides and the intersection of the diagonals are collinear.[5]: Thm.15 
  • [5]: p. 25 
  • The cosines of two adjacent angles sum to 0, as do the cosines of the other two angles.[5]: p. 25 
  • The cotangents of two adjacent angles sum to 0, as do the cotangents of the other two adjacent angles.[5]: p. 26 
  • One bimedian divides the quadrilateral into two quadrilaterals of equal areas.[5]: p. 26 
  • Twice the length of the bimedian connecting the midpoints of two opposite sides equals the sum of the lengths of the other sides.[5]: p. 31 

Additionally, the following properties are equivalent, and each implies that opposite sides a and b are parallel:

  • The consecutive sides a, c, b, d and the diagonals p, q satisfy the equation[5]: Cor.11 
  • The distance v between the midpoints of the diagonals satisfies the equation[5]: Thm.12 

Midsegment and height

The midsegment (also called the median or midline) of a trapezoid is the segment that joins the midpoints of the legs. It is parallel to the bases. Its length m is equal to the average of the lengths of the bases a and b of the trapezoid,[2]

The midsegment of a trapezoid is one of the two bimedians (the other bimedian divides the trapezoid into equal areas).

The height (or altitude) is the perpendicular distance between the bases. In the case that the two bases have different lengths (ab), the height of a trapezoid h can be determined by the length of its four sides using the formula[2]

where c and d are the lengths of the legs. This formula also gives a way of determining when a trapezoid of consecutive sides a, c, b, and d exists. There is such a trapezoid with bases a and b if and only if[6]

Area

The area K of a trapezoid is given by[2]

where a and b are the lengths of the parallel sides, h is the height (the perpendicular distance between these sides), and m is the arithmetic mean of the lengths of the two parallel sides. In 499 AD Aryabhata, a great mathematician-astronomer from the classical age of Indian mathematics and Indian astronomy, used this method in the Aryabhatiya (section 2.8). This yields as a special case the well-known formula for the area of a triangle, by considering a triangle as a degenerate trapezoid in which one of the parallel sides has shrunk to a point.

Molloy's Rule takes this a step further by considering the circumference of a circle and its centre point as the "parallel" sides and the radius as the perpendicular distance between them to give the area of the circle.[7]

From the formula for the height, it can be concluded that the area can be expressed in terms of the four sides as[2]

When one of the parallel sides has shrunk to a point (say a = 0), this formula reduces to Heron's formula for the area of a triangle.

Another equivalent formula for the area, which more closely resembles Heron's formula, is[2]

where is the semiperimeter of the trapezoid. (This formula is similar to Brahmagupta's formula, but it differs from it, in that a trapezoid might not be cyclic (inscribed in a circle). The formula is also a special case of Bretschneider's formula for a general quadrilateral).

From Bretschneider's formula, it follows that

The line that joins the midpoints of the parallel sides, bisects the area.

Diagonals

The lengths of the diagonals are[2]

where a and b are the bases, c and d are the other two sides, and a < b.

If the trapezoid is divided into four triangles by its diagonals AC and BD (as shown on the right), intersecting at O, then the area of AOD is equal to that of BOC, and the product of the areas of AOD and BOC is equal to that of AOB and COD. The ratio of the areas of each pair of adjacent triangles is the same as that between the lengths of the parallel sides.[2]

Let the trapezoid have vertices A, B, C, and D in sequence and have parallel sides AB and DC. Let E be the intersection of the diagonals, and let F be on side DA and G be on side BC such that FEG is parallel to AB and CD. Then FG is the harmonic mean of AB and DC:[8]

The line that goes through both the intersection point of the extended nonparallel sides and the intersection point of the diagonals, bisects each base.[9]

Other properties

The center of area (center of mass for a uniform lamina) lies along the line segment joining the midpoints of the parallel sides, at a perpendicular distance x from the longer side b given by[10]

The center of area divides this segment in the ratio (when taken from the short to the long side)[11]: p. 862 

If the angle bisectors to angles A and B intersect at P, and the angle bisectors to angles C and D intersect at Q, then[9]

More on terminology

The term trapezoid was once defined as a quadrilateral without any parallel sides in Britain and elsewhere. (The Oxford English Dictionary says "Often called by English writers in the 19th century".)[12] According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the sense of a figure with no sides parallel is the meaning for which Proclus introduced the term "trapezoid". This is retained in the French trapézoïde ([13]), German Trapezoid, and in other languages. However, this particular sense is considered obsolete.

A trapezium in Proclus' sense is a quadrilateral having one pair of its opposite sides parallel. This was the specific sense in England in 17th and 18th centuries, and again the prevalent one in recent use outside North America. A trapezium as any quadrilateral more general than a parallelogram is the sense of the term in Euclid.

Confusingly, the word trapezium was sometimes used in England from c. 1800 to c. 1875, to denote an irregular quadrilateral having no sides parallel. This is now obsolete in England, but continues in North America. However this shape is more usually (and less confusingly) just called an irregular quadrilateral.[14][15]

Application in geometry

The crossed ladders problem is the problem of finding the distance between the parallel sides of a right trapezoid, given the diagonal lengths and the distance from the perpendicular leg to the diagonal intersection.

Architecture

The Temple of Dendur in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City

In architecture the word is used to refer to symmetrical doors, windows, and buildings built wider at the base, tapering towards the top, in Egyptian style. If these have straight sides and sharp angular corners, their shapes are usually isosceles trapezoids. This was the standard style for the doors and windows of the Inca.[16]

Application in biology

Example of a trapeziform pronotum outlined on a spurge bug

In morphology, taxonomy and other descriptive disciplines in which a term for such shapes is necessary, terms such as trapezoidal or trapeziform commonly are useful in descriptions of particular organs or forms.[17]

See also

References

  1. ^ Oxford English Dictionary entry at trapezoid.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Weisstein, Eric W. "Trapezoid". MathWorld.
  3. ^ "American School definition from "math.com"". Retrieved 2008-04-14.
  4. ^ Trapezoids, [1], accessed 2012-02-24.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Martin Josefsson, "Characterizations of trapezoids", Forum Geometricorum, 13 (2013) 23-35.
  6. ^ Quadrilateral Formulas, The Math Forum, Drexel University, 2012, [2].
  7. ^ https://galwaymathsgrinds.wordpress.com/2013/10/24/playful-experimentation-leads-to-molloys-law
  8. ^ GoGeometry, [3], Accessed 2012-07-08.
  9. ^ a b Owen Byer, Felix Lazebnik and Deirdre Smeltzer, Methods for Euclidean Geometry, Mathematical Association of America, 2010, p. 55.
  10. ^ efunda, General Trapezoid, [4], Accessed 2012-07-09.
  11. ^ Tom M. Apostol and Mamikon A. Mnatsakanian (December 2004). "Figures Circumscribing Circles" (PDF). American Mathematical Monthly: 853–863. Retrieved 6 April 2016.
  12. ^ Oxford English Dictionary entries for trapezoid and trapezium.
  13. ^ "Larousse definition for trapézoïde".
  14. ^ Chambers 21st Century Dictionary Trapezoid
  15. ^ "1913 American definition of trapezium". Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary. Retrieved 2007-12-10.
  16. ^ http://gogeometry.com/MachuPicchu.htm
  17. ^ John L. Capinera (11 August 2008). Encyclopedia of Entomology. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 386, 1062, 1247. ISBN 978-1-4020-6242-1.