Questions tagged [geometry]

For questions about geometric shapes, congruences, similarities, transformations, as well as the properties of classes of figures, points, lines, and angles.

Geometry is one of the classical disciplines of math. It is derived from two Latin words, "geo" + "metron" meaning earth & measurement. Thus it is concerned with the properties and relations of points, lines, surfaces, solids, and higher dimensional analogs. Since its earliest days, geometry has served as a practical guide for measuring lengths, areas, and volumes, and geometry is still used for this purpose today. Geometry is important because the world is made up of different shapes and spaces.

Geometry has applications to many fields, including art, architecture, physics, as well as to other branches of mathematics.

Sub-fields of contemporary geometry:

$1.\quad$ Algebraic geometry – is a branch of geometry studying zeroes of multivariate polynomials. It includes the linear and polynomial algebraic equations used for finding these sets of zeros. The applications of algebraic geometry include cryptography, string theory, etc.

$2.\quad$ Discrete geometry – is concerned with the relative positions of simple geometric objects, such as points, lines, triangles, circles etc.

$3.\quad$ Differential geometry – uses techniques of algebra and calculus for problem-solving. The applications of differential geometry include general relativity in physics, etc.

$4.\quad$ Euclidean geometry – The study of plane and solid figures on the basis of axioms and theorems including points, lines, planes, angles, congruence, similarity, solid figures. It has a wide range of applications in computer science, modern mathematics problem solving, crystallography etc.

$5.\quad$ Convex geometry – includes convex shapes in Euclidean space using techniques of real analysis. It has application in optimization and functional analysis in number theory.

$6.\quad$ Topology – is concerned with properties of space under continuous mapping. Its application includes consideration of compactness, completeness, continuity, filters, function spaces, grills, clusters and bunches, hyperspace topologies, initial and final structures, metric spaces, metrization, nets, proximal continuity, proximity spaces, separation axioms, and uniform spaces.

$7.\quad$ Plane geometry – This wing of geometry deals with flat shapes which can be drawn on a piece of paper. These include lines, circles & triangles of two dimensions.

$8.\quad$ Solid geometry – It deals with $3$-dimensional objects like cubes, prisms, cylinders & spheres.

Reference:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geometry

50021 questions
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Quadrilateral with given angles

We are looking for angles x and y. I have found the values of the following angles: BEA = 74, BDA = 64, ACD = 68, ECD = 112, plus the relationship $x+y = 68$. All other angles equations, from triangles or the sum of angles in the quadrilateral…
Sal.Cognato
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Prove that $LB = LC$.

$M$ is the midpoint of line segment $BC$. $N$ and $P$ are points in $\triangle ABC$ such that $PM \parallel AB$ and $MN \parallel CA$, $CP \perp PM$ and $MN \perp NB$. $K$ is the midpoint of $NP$. $L$ is the reflection of $K$ in the circumcircle of…
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In the figure, a quarter circle, a semicircle and a circle are mutually tangent inside a square of side length $2$. Find the radius of the circle.

In the figure, a quarter circle, a semicircle and a circle are mutually tangent inside a square of side length $2$. Find the radius of the circle. I first assumed that when a vertical line is drawn from the radius of the semicircle, that line would…
suklay
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Geometry Proof: Convex Quadrilateral

A quadrilateral $ABCD$ is formed from four distinct points (called the vertices), no three of which are collinear, and from the segments $AB$, $CB$, $CD$, and $DA$ (called the sides), which have no intersections except at those endpoints labeled by…
anna
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Distribute a fixed number of points "uniformly" inside a polygon

I have a polygon in 2D (defined by a series of Vertex $V$ with coordinates). The polygon can be convex or concave. I have $n$ number of fix points I can put inside the polygon. The question is, how can I distribute the fix points as uniformly as…
Graviton
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How to compute the angle between two vectors expressed in the spherical coordinates?

Given two vectors $u, v \in \mathbb{R}^d$ represented the spherical coordinates is there a simple formula to compute the angle between the two vectors? Without loss of generality, we can assume that the vectors $u$ and $v$ have unit norm. I am not…
mkolar
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Approaching the circumference of a circle

We had a lengthy discussion yesterday, on how to prove that the circumference of a circle is $2\pi r$. By using google, the most commonly found proof starts in the following way. "Consider the regular n-gon inside the circle touching the circle at…
Benno
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Ellipse like on sphere

Find the locus of all points on a sphere such that the sum of geodesic distances from two fixed points $F_1$ and $F_2$ on it is a constant, less than its diameter. ( When radius of sphere goes to infinity, it would look like an ellipse). Following…
Narasimham
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volume of a cube and a ball in n-dimensions?

Why does the volume of an $n$-dimensional cube approach $\infty$ as $n \to \infty$, but the volume of an $n$-dimensional sphere approach $0$ as $n \to \infty$? To be more precise, $$\frac{V_n(\text{Sphere})}{V_n (\text{Cube})} \to 0, \,\text{as}\;…
saq7
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simple geometry question- equation of cylinder

A cylinder is $(x-a)^2+(y-a)^2=r^2$ with axis at $z$. I don't see where the '$z$' is in the equation. The book (calc 3) I'm using mentions the equation works for any $z$, but I don't see where the $z$ output is in the equation Here is the excerpt…
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Dissection of square into triangles

Prove that a square cannot be dissected into an odd number of triangles of equal area. Got to read about the question and its history in "Algebra and Tiling Homomorphisms in the Service of Geometry by Sherman Stein and Sándor Szabó quite an…
Bhargav
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find the point which has shortest sum of distance from all points?

I want to find a point in the Cartesian plane so that sum of distances from this point to all points in the plane be minimum. For example we have the points: $(x_1,y_1),(x_2,y_2),(x_3,y_3), . . .(x_n,y_n)$. Now find a point - we call this $(X,Y)$ -…
Anmk
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A tricky geometry problem

I already have my own solution for the following question. But I am still interested in other elegant solutions without trigonometry if possible. This is my own solution. I am lazy to upload the TeX code, I am sorry.
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The Dihedral Angles of a Tetrahedron in terms of its edge lengths

I am interested in any references which discuss a general formula for the dihedral angles of a tetrahedron in terms of its six edge lengths. If there is a well known formula could someone please post it here. Edit: The solution below works in the…
Kyle
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Side of the largest possible cube inside a cone?

Question: What is the side of the largest possible cube inside a cone of height $12$ units and radius $3\sqrt 2$ units? Now, when this question came up (in my class), I instantly thought to myself that $1^{st}$ I must check how the cube must be…