In geometry, Apollonius's theorem is a theorem relating the length of a median of a triangle to the lengths of its sides. It states that the sum of the squares of any two sides of any triangle equals twice the square on half the third side, together with twice the square on the median bisecting the third side. The theorem is named for the ancient Greek mathematician Apollonius of Perga.
Statement and relation to other theorem
editIn any triangle if is a median, then It is a special case of Stewart's theorem. For an isosceles triangle with the median is perpendicular to and the theorem reduces to the Pythagorean theorem for triangle (or triangle ). From the fact that the diagonals of a parallelogram bisect each other, the theorem is equivalent to the parallelogram law.
Proof
editThe theorem can be proved as a special case of Stewart's theorem, or can be proved using vectors (see parallelogram law). The following is an independent proof using the law of cosines.[1]
Let the triangle have sides with a median drawn to side Let be the length of the segments of formed by the median, so is half of Let the angles formed between and be and where includes and includes Then is the supplement of and The law of cosines for and states that
Add the first and third equations to obtain as required.
See also
edit- Formulas involving the medians' lengths – Line segment joining a triangle's vertex to the midpoint of the opposite side
References
edit- ^ Godfrey, Charles; Siddons, Arthur Warry (1908). Modern Geometry. University Press. p. 20.
External links
edit- Apollonius Theorem at PlanetMath.
- David B. Surowski: Advanced High-School Mathematics. p. 27