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

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Archimedes' derivation of the spherical cap area formula

Archimedes derived a formula for the area of a spherical cap. so Archimedes says that the curved surface area of a spherical cap is equal to the area of a circle with radius equal to the distance between the vertex at the curved surface and the…
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Geometry problem using circular arcs

The construction for the problem is as follows: Given some circular arc $A$ centred at $C$ with an angle $\theta \geq 180^{\circ}$ and endpoints $a,b$, take some arbitrary point $t$ inside the region bounded by the arc and the segment…
burbank
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Biggest Circle you can fit in a Hypercube

In a unit square the biggest circle is of diameter 1. In a unit cube I have reasoned that the biggest circle is $\sqrt{\frac{6}{5}}$ (EDIT:(Full solution: $r = \sqrt{\frac{n}{8}}$) This reasoning is wrong; there are larger circles, only read this…
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Suppose I drew every chord in a circle. Is the chord/area ratio uniform or non-uniform?

I graphed a finite number of cords whose endpoints are nicely placed around a circle (a nice case). This graph seems to suggest that there are more chords in certain regions than in others (for example, there are lots of chords near the end points…
David
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What is the smallest circle such that an arbitrary set of circles can be placed on the circumference without overlapping?

I have a set of circles of arbitrary radii: $r_1, r_2, r_3, ... r_n$. I wish to arrange them around an inner circle so that they are all touching the perimeter of the inner circle, and do not overlap each other. What I don't know how to do is…
dja
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What is the Sequence that Maximizes this Distance?

Suppose we are given $n$ segments $l_1,...,l_n$ in $\mathbb{R}^2$ such that $|l_i|=i,\ \forall\ i=1,...,n$, where $|l_i|$ is the length of $l_i$. Let $\alpha_1,...,\alpha_{n-1}$ be $n-1$ angles such that $\alpha_i>0$ and…
Tomás
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Why sum of interior angles in convex polygon is $(n-2)\cdot 180$

couple days ago in my math high school lessons I learned that sum of interior angles in convex polygon is: $Z$ = sum of the angles, $n$ = number of sides in polygon $Z=(n-2)\cdot 180$ Can someone help me understanding this formula, and why is it…
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How many squares are crossed by the diagonal of a rectangle splitted into $N \times M$ squares

I need help with this question Here is the problem: I have a rectangle with fixed size NxM, such that N, M are positive natural numbers. And this rectangle of size NxM is splitted into squares with size 1x1 ; actually if the rectangle sizes are 3x3,…
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How to find a point between two points with given distance?

Lets say I have point P1(10,10) and P2(20,20). I want to find a P3 which is on between this two points and 3 units away from P1. What is the formula to find P3 ? Known values: X1, X2, Y1 , Y2, distance. Wanted values: X3,…
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How do you calculate the semi-minor axis of an ellipsoid?

Given the semi-major axis and a flattening factor, is it possible to calculate the semi-minor axis?
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Non-geometric Proof of Pythagorean Theorem

Is there a purely algebraic proof for the Pythagorean theorem that doesn't rely on a geometric representation? Just algebra/calculus. I want to TRULY understand the WHY of how it is true. I know it works and I know the geometric proofs.
Carpenter
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Equilateral triangle in a circle

Suppose you have a circle and consider three disjoint $60$ degree arcs $A,B,C$ in the circle. (i.e the arcs $A,B,C$ are separated by three arcs $x,y,z$ (with $x+y+z=180$ degrees and $x,y,z>0$)). Now take the chords on $x,y,z$. Call them $X,Y,Z$…
TheGeometer
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How to prove that a torus has the same volume as a cylinder (with the height equal to the torus' perimeter)

I want to find the volume of a torus with a given thickness and a given radius. Let r be the radius of a circle with its midpoint at $M(0|b)$ ($b \geq r$). Now I want to rotate this circle about the x-axis, that is to say about a circular path which…
Huy
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If point is nothing how come line which made up of set of points has length

As per wiki , In particular, the geometric points do not have any length, area, volume, or any other dimensional attribute.But when line is made up of set of points how come it has length? I am not too good in maths but this question was back in my…
ajax D
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Counting integral lattice points in a triangle that may not have integer coordinates?

I have a triangle with one vertex on 0,0, another at 0,Y, and the third at X,Y, where Y is a positive integer and and X is any positive number (can be irrational/decimal/integral/etc). I tried using Pick's Theorem but it requires all integer…