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Geometry Notes Centres of Triangles

The document discusses important terms related to the centers of triangles: - The median, altitude, perpendicular bisector, and angle bisector lines all meet at specific centers - the centroid, orthocenter, circumcenter, and incenter, respectively. - These centers have distinctive properties, such as the centroid dividing each median in a ratio of 2:1, all altitudes meeting at the orthocenter, the circumcenter being the center of the circle circumscribing the triangle, and the incenter being equidistant from the triangle sides. - Understanding the properties of these triangle centers is important for management entrance exams.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
236 views

Geometry Notes Centres of Triangles

The document discusses important terms related to the centers of triangles: - The median, altitude, perpendicular bisector, and angle bisector lines all meet at specific centers - the centroid, orthocenter, circumcenter, and incenter, respectively. - These centers have distinctive properties, such as the centroid dividing each median in a ratio of 2:1, all altitudes meeting at the orthocenter, the circumcenter being the center of the circle circumscribing the triangle, and the incenter being equidistant from the triangle sides. - Understanding the properties of these triangle centers is important for management entrance exams.

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rohitshukla0543
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Geometry Notes

Topic :- Centres of triangles


Important for Management Entrance Exams
MBA Pathshala

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Geometry Notes
Important Terms with Respect to a Triangle
1. Median :- A line joining the mid-point of a side of a triangle to the opposite vertex is
called a median. In the figure the three medians are PG, QF and RE where G, E and
F are mid-points of their respective sides.
• A median divides a triangle into two parts of
equal area.
• The point where the three medians of a
triangle meet is called the centroid of the
triangle.
• The centroid of a triangle divides each median
in the ratio 2 : 1.
i.e. PC:CG = 2 : 1 = QC:CF = RC:CE

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Geometry Notes
2. Altitude/Height :- A perpendicular drawn from any vertex to the opposite side is called
the altitude. (In the figure, AD, BF and CE are the altitudes of the triangles).

• All the altitudes of a triangle meet at a point called the orthocentre of the triangle.
• The angle made by any side at the orthocentre and the vertical angle make a
supplementary pair (i.e. they both add up to 180°).

In the figure below: ∠A + ∠BOC = 180° = ∠C + ∠AOB

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Geometry Notes
3. Perpendicular Bisectors A line that is a perpendicular to a side and bisects it is the
perpendicular bisector of the side.
• The point at which the perpendicular bisectors of the
sides meet is called the circumcentre of the triangle
• The circumcentre is the centre of the circle that
circumscribes the triangle. There can be only one such
circle.
• Angle formed by any side at the circumcentre is two
times the vertical angle opposite to the side. This is the
property of the circle whereby angles formed by an arc
at the centre are twice that of the angle formed by the
same arc in the opposite arc. Here we can view this as:
∠ QCR = 2 ∠ QPR (when we consider arc QR and it’s
opposite arc QPR)

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Geometry Notes
4. Incenter :- The lines bisecting the interior angles of a triangle are the angle bisectors
of that triangle.
• The angle bisectors meet at a point called the incentre of the triangle.
• The incentre is equidistant from all the sides of the triangle
• From the incentre with a perpendicular drawn to any of
the sides as the radius, a circle can be drawn touching all
the three sides. This is called the incircle of the triangle.
The radius of the incircle is known as inradius.
• The angle formed by any side at the incentre is always a
right angle more than half the angle opposite to the side.
1
This can be illustrated as ∠QXR P = 90 + ∠P
2
• If QY and RY are the angle bisectors of the exterior
1
angles at Q and R, then: ∠QYR = 90 - 2∠P

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