Difference between revisions of "Centroid"

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The '''centroid''' of a [[triangle]] is the point of intersection of the [[median of a triangle |medians]] of the triangle and is generally denoted <math>G</math>.  The centroid has the special property that, for each median, the distance from a vertex to the centroid is twice that of the distance from the centroid to the midpoint of the side opposite that vertex.  Also, the three medians of a triangle divide it into six regions of equal area.
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The '''centroid''' of a [[triangle]] is the [[point]] of [[intersection]] of the [[median of a triangle | medians]] of the triangle and is conventionally denoted <math>G</math>.  The centroid has the special property that, for each median, the distance from a vertex to the centroid is twice that of the distance from the centroid to the midpoint of the side opposite that vertex.  Also, the three medians of a triangle divide it into six regions of equal area.
 
The centroid is the center of mass of the triangle; in other words, if you connected a string to the centroid of a triangle and held the other end of the string, the triangle would be level.
 
The centroid is the center of mass of the triangle; in other words, if you connected a string to the centroid of a triangle and held the other end of the string, the triangle would be level.
  
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== Proof of concurrency of the medians of a triangle ==
 
== Proof of concurrency of the medians of a triangle ==
By [[Ceva's Theorem]], we must show that <math>AO\cdot BM\cdot CN =OB\cdot MC\cdot NA</math>.  But this falls directly from the fact that <math>AO=OB, BM=MC,</math> and <math>CN=NA</math>.
 
  
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''Note: The existance of the centroid is a trivial consequence of [[Ceva's Theorem]].  However, there are many interesting and elegant ways to prove its existance, such as those shown below.''
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=== Proof 1 ===
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''Readers unfamiliar with [[homothety]] should consult the second proof.''
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Let $\displaystyle D,E,F$ be the respective midpoints of sides <math>\displaystyle BC, CA, AB</math> of triangle $\displaystyle ABC$.  We observe that $\displaystyle DE, EF, FE$ are parallel (and of half the length of) $\displaystyle AB, BC, CA$, respectively.  Hence the triangles $ABC$, $DEF$ are homothetic with respect to some point $\displaystyle G$ with dilation factor $\displaystyle -\frac{1}{2}$; hence $AD, BE, CF$ all pass through $\displaystyle G$, and $\displaystyleAG = 2 GD; BG = 2 GE; CG = 2 GF$.  Q.E.D.
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=== Proof 2 ===
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Let $\displaystyle ABC$ be a triangle, and let $\displaystyle D,E,F$ be the respective [[midpoint]]s of the segments $\displaystyle BC, CA, AB$.  Let $\displaystyle G$ be the intersection of $\displaystyle BE$ and $\displaystyle $CF$.  Let $\displaystyle E',F'$ be the respective midpoints of $\displaystyle BG, CG $.  We observe that both $\displaystyle EF $ and $\displaystyle E'F'$ are [[parallel]] to $\displaystyle CB $ and of half the length of $\displaystyle CB $.  Hence $\displaystyle EFF'E' $ is a [[parallelogram]].  Since the diagonals of parallelograms [[bisect]] each other, we have $\displaystyle GE = E'G = BE'$, or <math>\displaystyle BG = 2GE </math>.  Hence each median passes through a similar trisection point of any other median; hence the medians concur.  Q.E.D.
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We note that both of these proofs give the result that the distance of a vertex of a point of a triangle to the centroid of the triangle is twice the distance from the centroid of the traingle to the midpoint of the opposite side.
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==
 
* [[Cevian]]
 
* [[Cevian]]
 
* [[Geometry]]
 
* [[Geometry]]

Revision as of 19:23, 25 August 2006

This article is a stub. Help us out by expanding it.

The centroid of a triangle is the point of intersection of the medians of the triangle and is conventionally denoted $G$. The centroid has the special property that, for each median, the distance from a vertex to the centroid is twice that of the distance from the centroid to the midpoint of the side opposite that vertex. Also, the three medians of a triangle divide it into six regions of equal area. The centroid is the center of mass of the triangle; in other words, if you connected a string to the centroid of a triangle and held the other end of the string, the triangle would be level.

The coordinates of the centroid of a coordinatized triangle is (a,b), where a is the arithmetic average of the x-coordinates of the vertices of the triangle and b is the arithmetic average of the y-coordinates of the triangle.


Centroid.PNG


Proof of concurrency of the medians of a triangle

Note: The existance of the centroid is a trivial consequence of Ceva's Theorem. However, there are many interesting and elegant ways to prove its existance, such as those shown below.

Proof 1

Readers unfamiliar with homothety should consult the second proof.

Let $\displaystyle D,E,F$ be the respective midpoints of sides $\displaystyle BC, CA, AB$ of triangle $\displaystyle ABC$. We observe that $\displaystyle DE, EF, FE$ are parallel (and of half the length of) $\displaystyle AB, BC, CA$, respectively. Hence the triangles $ABC$, $DEF$ are homothetic with respect to some point $\displaystyle G$ with dilation factor $\displaystyle -\frac{1}{2}$; hence $AD, BE, CF$ all pass through $\displaystyle G$, and $\displaystyleAG = 2 GD; BG = 2 GE; CG = 2 GF$. Q.E.D.

Proof 2

Let $\displaystyle ABC$ be a triangle, and let $\displaystyle D,E,F$ be the respective midpoints of the segments $\displaystyle BC, CA, AB$. Let $\displaystyle G$ be the intersection of $\displaystyle BE$ and $\displaystyle $CF$. Let $\displaystyle E',F'$ be the respective midpoints of $\displaystyle BG, CG $. We observe that both $\displaystyle EF $ and $\displaystyle E'F'$ are parallel to $\displaystyle CB $ and of half the length of $\displaystyle CB $. Hence $\displaystyle EFF'E' $ is a parallelogram. Since the diagonals of parallelograms bisect each other, we have $\displaystyle GE = E'G = BE'$, or $\displaystyle BG = 2GE$. Hence each median passes through a similar trisection point of any other median; hence the medians concur. Q.E.D.

We note that both of these proofs give the result that the distance of a vertex of a point of a triangle to the centroid of the triangle is twice the distance from the centroid of the traingle to the midpoint of the opposite side.

See also