Forum — Daily Challenge
    • Categories
    • Recent
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Groups
    • Login

    Help

    Module 2 Day 4 Challenge Part 3
    2
    3
    18
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • The Blade DancerT
      The Blade Dancer M0★ M1★ M2★ M3★ M4 M5
      last edited by

      At around timestamp 4:30, why is the height line where it is? Why doesn't it start at the intersection in the middle (the 120 degree angle?)

      The Blade Dancer
      League of Legends, Valorant: Harlem Charades (#NA1)
      Discord: Change nickname if gay#7585

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • The Blade DancerT
        The Blade Dancer M0★ M1★ M2★ M3★ M4 M5
        last edited by

        How does Prof. Loh know that all the triangles have the same area?

        The Blade Dancer
        League of Legends, Valorant: Harlem Charades (#NA1)
        Discord: Change nickname if gay#7585

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • debbieD
          debbie ADMIN M0★ M1 M5
          last edited by debbie

          Hi TSS Graviser,

          This is a really interesting and surprising characteristic of parallelograms, that the four triangles formed from the intersection of their diagonals have the same area! I'm glad you asked about it.

          For your first question, actually, there are three ways of thinking of a base and height for a given triangle. This is because there are three sides of a triangle! In the diagram below, I have drawn the three different heights for the yellow triangle, as well as the three different heights for the purple triangle. I tried to color-code the heights with their matching bases.

          M2W1D4-ch-part-1-solution-bed-abe-smaller.png

          The idea is that a height must be perpendicular to the base. That means an altitude might have to lie outside the triangle, which is true for obtuse triangles.

          Now, for the four triangles formed from the diagonals of the parallelogram, let's look at this picture:

          M2W1D4-ch-why-same-area.png

          The purple triangle and yellow triangles have the same altitude, which is labeled as "h." We are choosing here the red line to be the base of the purple triangle, and the green line to be the base of the yellow triangle. Note that the line marked with an \(h\) is indeed perpendicular to both of these base. Now, the exciting part is that, due to the symmetry of the parallelogram, the diagonals cut each other in half, so the red line is the same length as the green line. This is why the area of the purple triangle is equal to the area of the yellow triangle.

          The other two triangles which were not colored in the diagram are just flipped versions of these two, so the same applies to them, and any such triangles drawn from any parallelogram's diagonals.

          Happy Learning!

          The Daily Challenge Team

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0

          • 1 / 1
          • First post
            Last post
          Daily Challenge | Terms | COPPA