Advanced Geometry/Basic Constructions and Geometric Thinking

Notation edit

Points edit

A, B, C ... will be used to denote points. In addition to denoting points in space, uppercase Roman letters can also denote the vertices and their respective angles.

Lines edit

For two arbitrary points A and B:

  • [AB) denotes a ray that begins at A and passes through B.
  • (AB) denotes a line through the two points.
  • [AB] or AB denotes a line segment beginning at A and ending at B.

Besides typographical convenience, this kind of notation is designed to reflect interval notation used to represent the real number line.

Polygons edit

Angles in Polygons edit

For angles, given two terminal points A and C with a vertex of B, the angle will be denoted by ∠ABC.

General Polygons edit

For a polygon, the letters a, b, c... will denote the sides of a polygon. The sides of a polygon will always be denoted with lowercase, italicized Roman letters. In the case of a triangle, the sides a, b, c... will denote the sides opposite of vertices A, B, C....

Triangles edit

The perimeter of a triangle is 2p. We use this notation so that we may denote the semiperimeter as simply p.

ha, hb, and hc denote the altitudes and ma, mb, and mc the medians of a triangle ABC, corresponding to sides a, b, c.

ta is the internal bisector of ∠A. Ta is the external bisector of ∠A.

Circles edit

  and   are the radii of the circumscribed circle and inscribed circle, respectively.

  denotes the circle having point   for its center and the length of segment   for its radius.   doesn't have to be the literal segment-- merely its length.

Intersections edit

  denotes the point of intersection of two lines   and  . Alternatively, if   and   are defined, the intersection may be denoted by  . If circles are being used for intersection and there is ambiguity, a direction will be specified after so the reader may choose the appropriate intersection.

Constructing Parallel Lines edit

 
Animation of the construction to problem 1.

Problem: Given an existing line   and a point   not on that line, construct a line parallel to   through the given point.

Solution: Construct an arbitrary line   so that it passes through point   and intersects  . Let  . Construct a circle with an arbitrary radius and with   as its center. Let   be the northern intersection between the circle at   and line  . Construct circle  . Let   north. Let   east. Construct   and  . Let   southeast. Create a line that goes through   and  . This new line will be parallel to  .

Proof: This proof relies on the following theorem: if   and   are congruent, then   is parallel to  . Let us assume that the previous statement is false, and having   results in nonparallel lines. Because of this, there must be some point   where   and   meet. Because of that, triangle QPZ is formed. Because  , it follows that   is supplementary to  . That being said, because   is supplementary to  ,   must equal zero degrees, which is impossible, therefore,  is parallel to  .

Notice that this proof works only for the right hand side. Proving it for the left-hand side uses mostly the same reasoning, except with different symbols, so it is left as an exercise for the reader.

Dividing a Segment into N parts edit

 
Animation of the construction to problem 2.

Problem: Divide a given segment into n equal parts, where n is an integer greater than two.

Solution: We'll let n = 3 for this example, but the method used should make it easy for the reader to generalize it to greater values of n. Let us call the given segment   for convenience.

Construct a circle of arbitrary length at point  . Create an arbitrary point   so that it lies on the circle we just made. Construct the line  . Construct  . Let   north. Construct  . For convenience's sake, let's call  , line  . Let   north. Construct  . Let's call  , line  . To complete this, construct parallel lines through   and  , and make both lines parallel to  . Let us call the parallel line through  , line  , and let us call the parallel line through  , line  . Let   and let  . These two points shall divide   into three.

If we want to generalize this to higher values of n, just construct (n-3) more circles on  , and follow the rest of the procedure.

Proof:If we look back at our construction, one should notice that we also constructed three triangles: triangle ACG, triangle ADF, and triangle AEB. All of these triangles share   in common. In addition, because  ,  , and   are all parallel to each other,   and   are all congruent to each other. Because of angle-angle congruence, it follows that triangles ACG, ADF, and AEB are all similar to each other.

Because of how we constructed the circles earlier,   is one third of  . Because triangle ACG is similar to triangle AEB, it follows that   is one third of  . Likewise,   is two-thirds of  , making   two-thirds of  . However, since we established that   is one-third of  , it follows by subtraction that   is one-third of  . Lastly, since   is two-thirds of  ,   must be one-third by subtraction.

Because each segment is one third of the whole length, it follows that   was divided into 3 equal parts.

It is also possible to see how the congruence relationship can work for all integral values of n greater than 2, but it is both tedious and non-essential to prove this.

Perpendicular Bisector edit

Problem: Given a line segment, construct it's perpendicular bisector.

Solution: Set your compass so that its radius is larger than half of the line segment. Construct two circles having this radius, with the centers at the endpoint of the line. There should be two points of intersection with the circles. Connect them. This line will be both perpendicular and a bisector of the segment.

Proof: This is a direct consequence of the equidistance theorems, more or less.

Perpendicular Line to a Point edit

 
Perpendicular line to a point construction animated.

Problem: Given a line and a point not on that line, construct a line through the given point so that it is perpendicular to the given line.

Solution: Let's call the line   and let's call the point  . Set the radius of your compass large enough so that it intersects   at two points with a center of  . Once the circle is constructed, let's call the two intersection points   and  . Construct two equiradii circles on   and  , and we'll call the intersection of these two circles   and  . Construct a line through   and  ; it will both go through the given point and will be perpendicular to the given line.

Proof: The initial two points of intersection are equidistant from  , and by constructing two more circles, an additional equidistant point from   and  . By the equidistance theorems, the newly constructed line is the perpendicular bisector of segment  , which makes it perpendicular to the given line.

Constructing Proportional Lines edit

 
Proportional lines construction animated.

Problem: Suppose you are given three line segments: line  , line  , and line  . They are not put together in a polygon or anything; just three plain old line segments. Construct another line segment called   so that  .

Solution: Construct a random line (that we shall call  ). Construct an arbitrary point so that it lies on   called  . Construct  . Let   west. Construct  . Let   west. Construct the perpendicular bisector of   that we shall call  .

We're now going to do something similar, except for segment  . Construct  . Let   east. Construct   Let   east. Construct the perpendicular bisector of segment   that we shall call  .

Construct  . Let  . Construct the line   and let it intersect line   at H. Segment   will satisfy the property.

Proof: Triangle ABG and triangle AEH are both right triangles. In addition, they have a vertical angle, which is congruent. Therefore by definition of similarity, 

Finding the Geometric Mean edit

 
Geometric Mean Construction
 
Fig. 1

Problem: Given two segments   and  , find the geometric mean of the two segments.

Solution: Create a point   and construct  . Construct a point on the newly-created circle called  . Construct circle  . Construct the line   which shall be denoted as  . Let  . Construct a line through   which is perpendicular to  ; this line shall be called  . Bisect line segment  . Let   be this point of bisection. Construct circle  . Let  . The line segment   shall satisfy the condition.

Proof: The proof of this construction relies on two steps: the first one is showing that for any right triangle,   (see Fig. 1). After that, we must show that we constructed such a right triangle.

To prove the first part, we must take note of a few properties. By definition, the altitude   is perpendicular to the hypotenuse. This means that both   and   are right angles. Now, notice how  . In addition,  . Setting both of these equations equal to each other leads to  . Therefore, by subtraction,  . Because we have shown that two angles in two different triangles are the same, it follows that triangle ABD is similar to triangle BCD. By definition of similarity, this means that  . By cross multiplication,  . This can be rewritten as  . By solving for f, this becomes  .

To show that we constructed such a triangle, notice that in our construction, we made the hypotenuse equal   and constructed a circle with the hypotenuse being the diameter. By Thales' Theorem, any point on the circle connected to the endpoints of the diameter forms a right angle, thus constructing a right triangle satisfying the properties.

Squaring edit

A large segment of constructions are trying to construct a square that has the same area as a given geometric figure. Some of these are impossible, such as constructing equal-area circles and squares, but many of them are possible, such as rectangles and triangles.

Squaring the Rectangle edit

 
Animation of how to square the rectangle.

Problem: Given a rectangle, construct a square with equal areas.

Solution: For convenience, let's denote the rectangle as ABCD, with   being the longer sides while   are the shorter sides.

Construct  . Let   east. Construct the midpoint of   and call it F. Construct  . Extend   to intersect   at point  . The segment   is the sidelength for an equivalent square.

To construct the equivalent square, just create a circle with said radius, and construct two radii which are perpendicular to each other. Once that is done, construct two tangent lines to those radii. A square will form.

Squaring the Triangle edit

This is basically the same procedure, only with half of the height and the base being the constituent parts of the rectangle.


Tangents to a Circle edit

 
Figure 2

Problem: Given a circle and a point not on that circle, construct two tangent lines.

Solution: Let the circle have a center of  . Let   be the point that lies outside of it. Construct the line  , and name the two intersection points within the circle   and  . Construct  . Let  . Now, construct a line through   called   so that it is perpendiculars to  . Let F be the midpoint of  . Construct   Let  .

If you let the circle   intersect the given circle, the two points of intersection will be the two points of tangency.

Proof: This proof relies on the secant-tangent theorem, which is actually a special case of the secant-secant theorem. The theorem states that for any point which lies outside a circle, such as in Figure 2,  . When the chord   gets progressively smaller, such as the case of a tangent, the differences between   and   start to vanish, and   and   become more of the same. When this happens, where the secant line becomes the tangent line, the theorem becomes  .

If you observe the construction, you should notice that the same method is used to construct the geometric mean, only for   and  . Because of the secant-tangent theorem, a line segment with that length will touch the circle at exactly where the tangent lies.

Exercises edit

Solutions may be found here .

Low Difficulty edit

Problem 1: Construct a triangle given three line segments.

Problem 2: Construct a triangle given two line segments and an angle in between.

Problem 3: Construct a triangle given one line segment and two angles.

Problem 4: Given two squares, construct a third square whose area is equal to the sum of the two squares.

Problem 5: Given a point on a line and a radius, construct a circle with the given radius that is tangent to said point.

Medium Difficulty edit

Problem 6: Given an angle between a leg and a hypotenuse, construct a right triangle.

Problem 7: Given two squares, construct a third square whose area is equal to the difference of the two.

Problem 8: Let say you want to construct a parallelogram ABCD. You are given AB, BC, and AC. Construct a parallelogram using the given segments.

Problem 9: Prove that if the altitude to the hypotenuse of a right triangle divides the hypotenuse into a ratio, that ratio is equal to the square of the legs.

Problem 10: Divide a given segment into the ratio of the squares of two given segments.

Problem 11: Construct a right triangle given the ratio of the legs squared.

High Difficulty edit

Problem 12: Construct the internal tangents of two circles and prove that the construction is valid.

Problem 13: Construct the external tangents of two circles and prove that the construction is valid.

Problem 14: Given a triangle, construct an equilateral triangle with the same area as the given triangle.