Geometry Notes
Geometry Notes
LECTURE NOTES
TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
1. Introduction
The word geometry comes to us from ancient Greek
metra(metria, measuring)
TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
set of two or more points is said to be collinear if there exists a straight line
which contains all of them. Note that by Euclids first axiom such line is necessarily
unique.
LECTURE NOTES 3
One can try and approach this theorem by the methods of coordinate
geometry. The unique circle of radius r centered at the point (p, q) is
given by the equation
(x p)2 + (y q)2 = r2 .
To ask that this circle passes through three given points (x1 , y1 ), (x2 , y2 )
and (x3 , y3 ) is to ask that
(x1 p)2 + (y1 q)2 = r2
(x2 p)2 + (y2 q)2 = r2
(x3 p)2 + (y3 q)2 = r2
so the problem reduces to solving the above system of equations in
three unknowns: p, q and r. A system of three linear equations in
three unknowns certainly has under certain conditions2, but this is a
system of quadratic equations!
This illustrates the main weakness of the coordinate geometry approach: it allows to turn any geometric problem into a bunch of equations to solve, but sometimes solving them may be harder than to solve
the original problem geometrically. Indeed, suppose we ask:
Problem. Given three lines, can we construct a circle tangent to all
three of them?
TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
function d
Points on a line
Real numbers
1
0
-2
3.1415...
This correspondence is precisely such that the length of the line segment
between the points 0 and 1 is our unit length, and the direction from
0 to 1 is our chosen positive direction.
Therefore, given any pair of points P1 and P2 in our plane, we can
define the distance between them as follows. First, we draw the unique
straight line through them. Then we choose P1 to be the point 0 and
the direction from P1 to P2 to be the positive direction. The real
number corresponding to P2 is then the distance between P1 and P2 .
We shall denote this by d(P1 , P2 ) or by |P1 P2 |, the latter reflecting that
it is the length of the line segment P1 P2 .
LECTURE NOTES 5
So the fourth axiom effectively asserts that all straight angles, angles
formed by two halves of a straight line, are equal (being a sum of two
right angles). Equivalently, it asserts that all angles formed by going
around a point in a complete circle
are equal (being a sum of four right angles). Therefore any two angles
which are the same fraction of a complete circle are equal.
TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
Points
on
a
circle
/2
/4
Real numbers
0 x < 2
3/2
3By
LECTURE NOTES 7
and then we draw a unit circle around B and mark by A0 the point
where this circle intersects the line BA on the same side of B as A.
Similarly, mark by C 0 the point where the circle intersects the line BC
on the same side of B as C.
C'
A'
We now define the value of ABC to be the real number corresponding
to C 0 if we choose A0 to be the point 0 on the circle and the direction
around the circle to be anti-clockwise.
An important point: ABC is not the same thing as CBA! The
definition above ensures that by ABC we always mean the angle from
BA to BC anti-clockwise.
TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
'
Proof. We have
+ =
0
+ =
The acronym Q.E.D. which you may often see concluding a mathematical
proof stands for quod erat demonstrandum which is Latin for what was to be
demonstrated. Its origin lies in the Greek phrase
, often abbreviated
, which means what was required to be proved and which concludes every
proof in Euclids Elements.
OED
LECTURE NOTES 9
rl (P)
(2) Given a point O in the plane define the dilation DO,2 with
centre O and scale factor 2 to be the map which leaves
the point O fixed and sends any point P 6= O to the unique
point D0,2 (P ) which lies on the continuation of the line segment
OP in the direction of P at the distance 2|OP | from O.
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DO,2(P)
DO,2(Q)
P
Q
O
RO,(Q)
Tv (P)
LECTURE NOTES 11
f(A)
f(B)
12
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C'
A'
By definition, the value of ABC is the arc length |A0 C 0 |. As our first
and crudest approximation of this arc we take straight line segment
AC
C'
A'
So set d1 = |AC| and observe that as the shortest path between any
two points is the straight line joining them we must have
d1 < |A0 C 0 |.
Now subdivide this arc in two equal parts and approximate each of
the halves by the corresponding straight line segment:
C'
A'
LECTURE NOTES 13
C'
C'
A'
A'
|A0 C 0 | = lim dn .
n
Our isometry f takes this whole construction to an identical construction approximating the image arc from f (A0 ) to f (C 0 ) on the unit
circle around f (B). Since f preserves the lengths of straight line segments we must have dn = f (dn ) and therefore
There are now two possibilities. First one is that the image arc goes
counter-clockwise from f (A0 ) to f (C 0 ) on the unit circle around B, and
therefore its length is the value of f (A)f (B)f (C). We have then
14
TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
LECTURE NOTES 15
5. Triangle congruences
For the clarity of the exposition we assume that all our triangles
are non-degenerate, that is - that their vertices are not collinear. An
enthusiastic reader is encouraged to try and extend the results of this
section to degenerate triangles, it is not very difficult.
Notation: In a triangle 4ABC we denote by A the internal angle
of the triangle at the vertex A and by the value of A. Similarly,
we denote by the value of B, the internal angle at B, and by the
value of C, the internal angle at C:
A
Similarly, in a triangle 4A0 B 0 C 0 we use A0 , B 0 and C 0 to denote
its internal angles at A0 , B 0 and C 0 , respectively. We further use 0 , 0
and 0 to denote the values of these angles.
Note, that in any 4ABC we have 0 < , , < as internal angles
of a triangle are clearly less that a straight angle:
A
Definition 7. A triangle 4ABC is clockwise (resp. anti-clockwise)
oriented if moving from A to B to C takes you clockwise (resp. anticlockwise) around the points in the interior of the triangle:
16
TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
Exercise 1. Verify that an isometry f : Plane Plane is orientationpreserving (resp. orientation-reversing) if and only if for every nondegenerate 4ABC the orientation of 4f (A)f (B)f (C) is the same as
(resp. opposite to) orientation of 4ABC.
Note that if 4ABC is clockwise oriented, then
= CAB, = ABC, = BCA
and if 4ABC is anti-clockwise oriented, then
= BAC, = CBA, = ACB.
Lemma (Lemma 2 21 ). Isometries preserve internal angles of a triangle.
More precisely, let 4ABC and 4A0 B 0 C 0 be a pair of triangles in a
plane. If 4ABC
= 4A0 B 0 C 0 then
= 0 , = 0 , = 0
A'
'
'
C'
'
B'
LECTURE NOTES 17
A'
C'
'
B'
A
then
4ABC
= 4A0 B 0 C 0 .
f(A)
A'
C'= f(C)
'
B' = f(B)
f(A)
A'
C'= f(C)
'
=
B' = f(B)
18
TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
So f (A) and A0 on the same line through B 0 and on the same side of
B 0 C 0 . By assumption we also have |BA| = |B 0 A0 | and since isometries
preserve lengths, we further have |B 0 f (A)| = |B 0 A0 |. So f (A) and A0
lie also at the same distance from B 0 and must therefore coincide. So
f (A) = A0 , f (B) = B 0 and f (C) = C 0 . As f is an isometry, we conclude
that triangles 4ABC and 4A0 B 0 C 0 are congruent. Q.E.D.
side
A warning:
angle
side
sid
side
angle
ASS is not.
Do not confuse the two.
Lemma 4. Let l be a line in the plane. The reflection rl in l is an
isometry.
Proof. Let A and B be a pair of points in the plane. Set A0 = rl (A) and
B 0 = rl (A). Set LA and LB to be the midpoints of AA0 and BB 0 . By
definition of rl the line l is perpendicular to AA0 and BB 0 and passes
through LA and LB . Finally, set O to be the intersection of AB 0 and l.
Case 1: A and B are on the same side of l
A
B
LA
LB
B'
A'
LECTURE NOTES 19
A'
'
C'
'
B'
then
4ABC
= 4A0 B 0 C 0 .
Proof. Since |BC| = |B 0 C 0 | by Axioms 6 and 7 there exists an isometry
f such that f (B) = B 0 , f (C) = C 0 and f (A) and A0 lie on the same
side of B 0 C 0 .
20
TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
f(A)
A'
C'= f(C)
'
B' = f(B)
The next step is just like in Lemma 3: by assumption = 0 , so B 0 f (A)
and B 0 A0 make the same angle with with B 0 C 0 . Since f (A) and A0 lie
on the same side of B 0 C 0 , it follows that they actually lie on the same
line B 0 A0 through B 0 :
f(A)
A'
'
C'= f(C)
'
=
B' = f(B)
Similarly, by assumption = 0 and therefore f (A) and A0 also lie on
the same straight line C 0 A0 through C. But now f (A) and A0 lie on both
B 0 A and CA0 . Since two distinct straight lines can intersect at most one
point A0 and f (A) must coincide. We have therefore f (A) = A0 , f (B) =
B 0 and f (C) = C 0 . Since f was taken to be an isometry, we conclude
that triangles 4ABC and 4A0 B 0 C 0 are congruent. Q.E.D.
Lemma 6. Let 4ABC be a triangle in the plane. Then |AC| = |BC|
if and only if = .
LECTURE NOTES 21
A'
C'
B'
A
then
6The
4ABC
= 4A0 B 0 C 0 .
elc
22
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A'
C'=f(C)
B' =f(B)
f(A)
in
4A0 f (A)C 0 .
A
7The
LECTURE NOTES 23
A
lAC
lAB
C
O
l BC
24
TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
Proof. Let lAB , lBC and lAC be the perpendicular bisectors of AB, BC
and AC, respectively. Then by Lemma 9
lAB = { the locus of points equidistant from A and B }
lBC = { the locus of points equidistant from B and C }
lAC = { the locus of points equidistant from A and C } .
Let O be the unique point where lAB and lBC intersect. Then, by
above, O is equidistant from A and B, and also O is equidistant from
B and C. Therefore
|OA| = |OB| = |OC|
and as, in particular, |OA| = |OC| point O must also lie on lAC . Moreover, the circle of radius |OA| and center O clearly passes through A,
B and C.
Suppose there exists another circle passing through A, B and C and
let O0 be its center. But then O0 is equidistant from A, B and C, so
it belongs to each of the lines lAB , lBC and lAC . Since any two lines
intersect at no more than one point, point O0 must coincide with O.
Q.E.D.
With this geometric picture in mind, we can now easily solve the
problem of finding the circle passing through three given points in
coordinates:
Exercise 3. Let A = (x1 , y1 ), B = (x2 , y2 ) and C = (x3 , y3 ) be any
three points in R2 .
(1) Find the gradient of AB and of BC.
(x2,y2)
y
(x1,y1)
gradient =
y
x
x
(2) Find the midpoints LAB and LBC of AB and AC.
(3) Recall that the equation of a line of gradient k passing through
a point (a, b) is
y = kx + (b ka)
and recall that perpendicular lines have gradients whose product is 1. With this in mind, find the equations of perpendicular bisects lAB and lBC of AB and AC.
(4) Find the point O where lAB and lBC intersect. Find the distance
|OA|. These are by Theorem 10 the center and the radius of
the requisite circle.
LECTURE NOTES 25
(5) We should check that |OA| = |OB| = |OC|. For this, check that
the formula for |OA| which youve obtained in the previous step
should be invariant under any permutation of indices. That
is - swapping xi with xj and yi with yj shouldnt change the
formula. Why is it enough to check that?
Definition 9. A line l is tangent to a circle C at point P if it
meets C only at P .
P
l
O
C
Lemma 11. Let l be a line and P a point not on l. Then there exists
a unique line through P which is perpendicular to l, and the shortest
distance from P to l is along this line.
Proof. Existence: Let Q be any point on l. Let P 0 be the unique
point such that
l, QP = QP 0 , l
and
|QP | = |QP 0 |.
Then draw the straight line segment P P 0 and let O be the point where
P P 0 intersects l. We then have 4OQP
= 4OQP 0 by SAS
O
l
P'
P'
and therefore
|OP | = |OP 0 |
and
P OQ = QOP 0 .
26
TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
P
l
O
C
Proof. Let l be the unique line which passes through P and is perpendicular to OP . Let P 0 be any point of l distinct from P .
LECTURE NOTES 27
P
P'
O
C
O
C
P
P'
P''
28
TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
B'
O
A'
A0 B 0 P = P A0 B 0 = B 0 A0 O
2
2
B'
O
P
A'
B''
LECTURE NOTES 29
P B 00 O = OB 0 P =
2
00
0
|P B | = |P B |.
We then have
A0 OP = P OB 0 = B 00 OP
and therefore straight lines OA0 and OB 00 actually coincide. But
then points A0 and B 00 must also coincide, by uniqueness of the
perpendicular from P onto the line OA0 B 00 (Lemma 11). Hence
|P A0 | = |P B 00 | = |P B 0 |
i.e. P is equidistant from lines OA and OB.
We conclude that OP is the bisector of AOB if and only if P is
equidistant from OA and OB. Q.E.D.
Theorem 14. Let 4ABC be a triangle in the plane. The bisectors lA ,
lB and lC of angles A, B and C in 4ABC are concurrent. The
point O in which they intersect is the center of the unique circle which
is contained in 4ABC and is tangent to all three of its sides.
A
lA
O
lC
lB
B
Proof. Let O be the point where lA and lB intersect. By Lemma 13:
lA = { the locus of all points inside A equidistant from AB and AC }
lB = { the locus of all points inside B equidistant from AB and BC }
lC = { the locus of all points inside C equidistant from BC and AC }
So lA lB is the locus of all points inside AB = 4ABC equidistant
from AB, BC and AC. But lA lB consists only of point O. So O
is the unique point within 4ABC equidistant from all three sides of
the triangle. In particular, O is equidistant from BC and AC. It
must therefore also lie on lC . So the three bisectors lA , lB and lC are
concurrent at O.
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TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
Let C be the circle whose center is O and whose radius is the distance
r from O to the three sides of the triangle. By Lemma 11 each side
of 4ABC has only one point whose distance from O is r the unique
point where the perpendicular from O falls onto the side in question.
So C meets each of the sides of 4ABC at precisely one point, i.e. it is
tangent to each of them.
For the final claim, let there be a circle C 0 whose center O0 lies within
4ABC and which is tangent to all three sides of 4ABC. By Lemma
12 the radius from O0 to any of the three points where C 0 touches a side
of the triangle is perpendicular to the side in question. So, by definition
of distance from a point to the line, the distance from O0 to each of
the sides of 4ABC is the radius of C 0 . Hence O0 is equidistant from
all three sides of 4ABC, i.e. O0 is actually the point O constructed
above and C 0 is the circle C.
Exercise 4 (Optional; hard!). In 3-dimensional space:
(1) What does it mean to say that a line through a point on a plane
is perpendicular to the plane in question? Is such line unique?
(2) How would you define a distance between a point and a plane?
(3) What does it mean to say that a sphere is tangent to a plane?
(4) Can you think of how to find a sphere tangent to 4 given planes?
7. Spherical Geometry
Nowhere8 in the results weve proved so far weve made use of Euclids 5th axiom or of a number of statements equivalent to it, e.g.
through every point not lying on a given line there passes exactly one
line parallel to the given one or the interior angles of every triangle
in the plane add up to .
This is because it is perfectly possible to have a consistent geometrical theory where this is not true. It is worth, therefore, differentiating
those results whose proof doesnt require the use of Euclids 5th from
those results whose proof does. Euclid himself must have been aware of
this, on some level, for in Elements he proves as many Propositions
as he can without using the 5th axiom before first invoking it in the
proof of his Proposition 29.
In this section we look at one of these non-Euclidean geometries the geometry of the surface of a sphere.
Problem: Evidently, there are no straight lines on the surface of
the sphere. Idea: In Euclidean geometry the straight line joining two
points A and B is the shortest path from one to the other. On the
surface of a sphere the shortest path between two points is a path
which goes along one of the geodesics.
Definition 11. A great circle or a geodesic on a sphere is the
intersection of this sphere with a plane passing through its centre.
8Almost
nowhere.
LECTURE NOTES 31
B
O
A
32
TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
Proof. Let O denote the centre of the sphere. If two points A and B
are not antipodal, then AB doesnt contain O, i.e. A, B and O are
not collinear. Therefore there is a unique plane passing through O, A
and B, and this plane carves out on the sphere the unique great circle
which passes through A and B.
Given any two points A and B on the sphere, we now have two
notions of distance:
O
A
LECTURE NOTES 33
l2
l2
O
l1
t2
l1
t1
Fact: In 3-space, for any given line segment AB all the lines through
B which are perpendicular to AB form together a unique plane. This
plane is called the plane through B perpendicular to AB.
34
TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
plane OPP'
O
C'
P'
lC
tC
C
O
LECTURE NOTES 35
lB
tB
+<
36
TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
'
l1
'
l3
l2
Since
(0 + ) + ( 0 + ) = + = 2
there are three possible cases
+ > and 0 + 0 <
+ < and 0 + 0 >
+ = and 0 + 0 =
We therefore see that Euclids 5th axiom implies that l1 and l2 are
parallel if and only if + = 0 + 0 = . In other words, two lines
are parallel if and only if a line falling on them makes on either side of
itself the internal angles which sum up to .
Let now l be any line and P a point not on it. Drop a perpendicular
P A from P onto l, i.e. let A be the unique point of l such that P A l.
Let now l1 be any line through P .
P
'
l1
l
'
LECTURE NOTES 37
l1
'
l3
l2
then
0 = and = 0 .
Proof. Since l1 is parallel to l2 we must have by Euclids 5th axiom
+ = 0 + 0 = .
But since makes a straight angle with 0 , we have also
+ 0 =
and therefore 0 = and = 0 . Q.E.D.
Lemma 16. Let 4ABC be a triangle in the plane. Then its interior
angles sum up to , i.e.
A + B + C = .
Proof. Let l be the unique line through C parallel to AB. Let 0 be the
angle l makes with AC that is adjacent to C in 4ABC. Similarly,
let 0 be the angle l makes with BC that is adjacent to C.
'
'
38
TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
A1
A2
A3
A4
A5
k
to Ak+1
Ak
Ak
interior
of the n
-gon
from Ak-1
Ak
e n- go
to Ak+1
Ak
o r of t h
interi
from Ak-1
LECTURE NOTES 39
k=1
and so finally
n
X
Ak = (n 2).
k=1
Q.E.D.
Exercise 6. Where and how does the proof of Theorem 17 make use of
the parallel postulate? Hint: what does this moving pencil argument
mean in the rigorous language weve been trying to develop?
Lemma 18. Let ABCD be a parallelogram (a quadrilateral whose sides
are pairwise parallel) with AB k CD and AC k BD.
A
Then
Exercise 7. Show that the point where the diagonals of a parallelogram intersect is the midpoint of each of the diagonals.
9. Area
Definition 15. The area of any geometrical figure is uniquely defined
by the following:
(1) The area of a rectangle is the product of the lengths of its two
adjacent sides.
(2) If two figures are disjoint or meet only along their edges, then
the area of their union is the sum of their areas.
(3) Congruent figures have equal areas.
40
TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
NB: Essentially, items (1) and (3) could be replaced by saying that
any square of side 1 has area 1, i.e. its all about a choice of a unit.
The main defining property of area is (2).
Lemma 19. The area of a parallelogram is its base times its height,
where the base is the length of any side of the parallelogram, and the
height is the distance from either of the remaining two vertices to the
line through the chosen side.
Proof. Drop perpendiculars CC 0 and DD0 from C and D onto line AB.
In other words, let C 0 and D0 be points of AB such that CC 0 AB
and DD0 AB.
C'
base = |AB|,
B D'
height = |CC 0 | = |DD0 |
Lemma 20. The area of a triangle is a half of its base times its height,
where the base is the length of any side of the triangle, and the
height is the distance from the remaining vertex to the line through
the chosen side.
Proof. Choose side AB as the base, then the height is the distance
from C to AB. Draw a line through B parallel to AC, a line through
C parallel to AB, and let A0 be the point where they intersect.
A'
LECTURE NOTES 41
C
B'
A'
C'
then we have
|AC 0 | |BA0 | |CB 0 |
= 1.
|C 0 B| |A0 C| |B 0 A|
Proof. The area of a triangle is a half of its base times its height
(Lemma 20) and so we have:
1
area(4P AC 0 ) = |AC 0 | dist(P, AC 0 )
2
1
area(4P BC 0 ) = |C 0 B| dist(P, C 0 B)
2
Since A, C 0 and B are collinear, we also have
dist(P, AC 0 ) = dist(P, C 0 B)
and therefore
|AC 0 |
area(4P AC 0 )
=
.
|C 0 B|
area(4P BC 0 )
Similarly we obtain
area(4CAC 0 )
|AC 0 |
=
.
area(4CBC 0 )
|C 0 B|
It is also evident from the diagram that
area(4CAP ) = area(4CAC 0 ) area(4P AC 0 )
area(4CBP ) = area(4CBC 0 ) area(4P BC 0 ).
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TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
Therefore
area(4CAP )
area(4CAC 0 ) area(4P AC 0 )
=
=
area(4CBP )
area(4CBC 0 ) area(4P BC 0 )
=
|AC 0 |
area(4CBC 0 )
|C 0 B|
area(4CBC 0 )
|AC 0 |
area(4P BC 0 )
|C 0 B|
area(4P BC 0 )
|AC 0 |
|C 0 B|
and
|CB 0 |
area(4CBP )
=
0
|B A|
area(4ABP )
= 1.
0
|C B| |A C| |B A|
area(4CBP ) area(4CAP ) area(4ABP )
Q.E.D.
=1
|C 0 B| |A0 C| |B 0 A|
implies that AA0 , BB 0 and CC 0 are concurrent.
Hint: Let P be the intersection of AA0 and BB 0 . Let C 00 be the
point where the line through CP intersects AB. What can we say
|AC 00 |
about |C
00 B| ?
Exercise 9. The medians of a triangle are the lines joining each vertex
to the middle of the opposite side. Show that the three medians of a
triangle are concurrent.
10. Triangles on a sphere
We assume without proof that the surface area of a sphere of radius
r is 4r2 .
Definition 16. An area contained in a sector between two great circles
is called a lune.
LECTURE NOTES 43
It is clear that the area of the lune is proportional to the corresponding angle between the great circles. Since the full sphere, which
corresponds to an angle of 2, has the surface area of 4r2 , we conclude
C
A'
B'
O
A
C'
Altogether, the great circles AB, BC and AC divide the sphere into 8
triangles which make up 4 pairs of antipodal twins. We write:
T = 4ABC and T 0 = A0 B 0 C 0 ,
and we write t for the area of T , tA for the area of TA , t0A for the area
of TA0 , et cetera. Let us now unwrap the picture above onto a flat
plane by cutting out 4A0 B 0 C 0 and making it the triangle at infinity:
A'
TA
'
TC
TB'
C
B
T
TB
TC
B'
A
'
TA
C'
44
TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
and
t + tC = C 2r2 .
We conclude that
3t + tA + tB + tC = (A + B + C)2r2 .
On the other hand
4r2 = surface area of the sphere = t + tA + tB + tC + t0 + t0A + t0B + t0C .
As antipodal twins are congruent, we have t = t0 , tA = t0A , etc. Hence
t + tA + tB + tC + t0 + t0A + t0B + t0C = 2(t + tA + tB + tC )
and so finally
t + tA + tB + tC = 2r2 .
We conclude that
2t = (3t + tA + tB + tC ) (t + tA + tB + tC ) =
= (A + B + C )2r2
and therefore
A + B + C = +
t
.
r2
Q.E.D.
C
B
A'
LECTURE NOTES 45
A''= f(A)
A'
46
TIMOTHY LOGVINENKO
Exercise 10. Prove the converse to Lemma 24. That is, prove that if
4ABC and 4A0 B 0 C 0 are a pair of triangles such that
|AB|
|BC|
|AC|
=
=
|A0 B 0 |
|B 0 C 0 |
|A0 C 0 |
then
4ABC = 4A0 B 0 C 0 .
Theorem 25 (Pythagoras Theorem). Let 4ABC be a triangle in the
plane such that B is a right angle,
then
|AB|2 + |BC|2 = |AC|2 .
Proof. Drop a perpendicular BD from B onto AC.
BAD + DCB =
2
BAD + ADB =
2
CBD + DCB =
2
and so
BAD = CBD and DCB = ADB.
By definition of similarity of triangles we have
4ABD
= 4ABC
= 4BCD.
Therefore by Lemma 24 we have
|AB|
|AD|
=
|AB|
|AC|
and consequently
|AB|2 = |AD||AC|.
LECTURE NOTES 47
Similarly,
|BC|2 = |DC||AC|
and we conclude that
|AB|2 + |BC|2 = (|AD| + |DC|)|AC| = |AC|2 .
Q.E.D.