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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Fermat's Point applies to isosceles triangles

Fermat's Point applies to equilateral triangles. Recently as I searched isosceles triangles on Wolfram Mathworld, I learnt that the same principle applies to similar isosceles triangles. Besides the fact that the total distance from the three…
Larry
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Golden Ratio plus 1

There was an interesting puzzle by Presh Talwalker in 'MindYourDecisions' about finding the radius of a circle that was cotangent to two larger circles. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i0dZukEw1JY I extended the problem by considering adding a…
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6 points in the plane: Suppose that any triangle formed by three points will be similar to the triangle formed by the remaining three points.

There exist six points $A_1, A_2, ..., A_6$ in the plane, no three of which are collinear. Suppose that any triangle formed by three points will be similar to the triangle formed by the remaining three points. If $A_1, A_2, ..., A_6$ are the…
ZENG
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Finding radius of circle inscribed in trapezium

A circle is inscribed in trapezoid $ABCD$. Let $K,L,M,N$ be the points of intersection of the circle with diagonals $AC$ and $BD$ respectively. $K$ is between $A$ and $L$ and $M$ is between $B$ and $N$. Given that $AK*LC = 16$ and $BM*ND =…
saisanjeev
  • 2,050
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Help with old Mu Alpha Theta Question. (Geometry)

I'm working on a question from an old Mu Alpha Theta exam. I'm stuck and would appreciate any hints. (Please no answers! I'm sure I'm just missing something stupid. Also, this is for fun. Not HW.) A square of area 8 is inscribed in a semi-circle…
user17137
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Prove the shortest path is closed (as in no intersections)

Picture of problem: I'm so stuck! Thank you!
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Area of a triangle inside a triangle

In $ABC$, let $D$, $E$, and $F$ be points on the sides $BC$, $AC$ and $AB$, respectively, such that $BC = 4CD$, $AC=5AE$, and $AB= 6BF$. If the area of $ABC$ is $120$, what is the area of $DEF$. I tried connecting the vertices of the inner…
SuperMage1
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5 circles around a cyclic quadrilateral

GeoGebra Implementation Let ABCD be a cyclic quadrilateral. A circle passes through A and B and tangent to CD at E. A circle passes through B and C and tangent to AD at F. A circle passes through C and D and tangent to AB at G. A circle passes…
abc...
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Third point of a triangle from only two points and all three edge lengths

I want a triangle composed of points A, B and C in Cartesian 3D space. I currently know the positions of points A and B, but I need point C. I have the line segment AB, and thus its magnitude. I have only the magnitudes of line segments AC and…
user8708
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Cross Normal to a Closed Curve

Does every closed, smooth, non-self-intersecting loop have at least one point in the interior from which two perpendicular lines can be drawn with each intersecting the loop at 90° at all four points of intersection?
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Average ratio of Manhattan distance to Euclidean distance

Suppose we've picked two points randomly from a uniform distribution over the Euclidean plane and we know that the Euclidean distance between them is $d$. What is the expected value of the Manhattan distance, $m$, between the two points,…
Shane
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Intersection of a sector and a rectangle

I have a rectangle and a circular sector in a Cartesian plane. What is the easiest way (algorithmically) to tell if they intersect? Edit: I'm looking to see if the areas intersect, not just the perimeters. Also, the rectangle is guaranteed to be…
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Can I uniquely identify a cell in an arbitrary "grid" by two numbers?

Suppose I have a paper on which I draw some kind of "hull" polygon. I divide that polygon into many other polygons which I call "cells". Now I want to uniquely identify each cell with the geometric center and the radius of the circumscribed…
Martin Thoma
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Extreme lat and lon for ellipse on sphere

I have 2 focal points of ellipse defined on a sphere: $F_1 = (q_1, p_1)$ and $F_2 = (q_2, p_2)$ and length of major axis $2a$. $R$ of a sphere is 1. $q_1, q_2$ are latitudes $p_1, p_2$ are longitudes I need to find 4 points: point on ellipse with…
kosmo16
  • 87
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Finding the value of $|DB| \cdot |DC|$

Given that $ABC$ is a triangle, $|AD| = 9$, $|AB| = |AC| = 6$. Find the value of $|DB| \cdot |DC|$ Since $|AB| = |AC| = 6$, I thought that $|BC| = 6$. However, that truly seems to be wrong. Any helps will be appreciated.
Melz
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