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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Decide diagonals on a hexagon inscribed in a circle

I have been struggling a bit with a math-task. The question is as follows: The hexagon ABCDEF is inscribed in a circle. The length of AF is 31 while the other five sides has the length of 81. Tell the sums of the diagonals from A. Dividing the…
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Is it possible to construct three cevians so that three of the parts are equivalent?

Recently I have started wondering if it is possible to construct two cevians in a triangle so that at least three of four parts which the cevians divide the triangle in are equivalent. I think the answer is yes, but do not know how to construct…
student28
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What is a sum of distances from two points to a point on a circle?

Hello? I want to know a sum of distances from two points to a point on a circle. There is a unit circle $C$ on a $3$D plane. For two given points $A = (2,2,2), B =(-2,3,4)$. Let $P$ be a point in $C$. What is a mimimum or maximum value of…
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How do I prove that the following point lies on director circle?

Tangents are drawn to $x^2+y^2=16$ from the point P $(0,h)$. These tangent stuff meet the x-axis at $A$ And $B$. Find h if area of Triangle $PAB$ is minimum. The answer of h is $sqrt.(32)$ which shows that this point lies on director circle ⭕️. How…
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A triangle with angle bisector and altitudes

In triangle ABC, AB=125, AC=117, BC=120. The angle bisector of A intersect BC at L and the angle bisector of B intersect AC at K. Let M and N be the feet of perpendiculars from C to BK and AL respectively. Find MN. I tried to coordinate bash this…
abc...
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Is this a known coherence between an ellipse and a circle?

Hello, I am sculptor of rather complex geometrical objects not a mathematician for sure. Designing a sculpture I discovered that both foci of an ellipse can be constructed using the intersection of two circles of equal diameter. The diameter is…
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Basic Geometry: Triangles

I'm trying to find an easy way to solve the problem below: Of course you could solve it by "brute force", example: - numerical means (vectors and dot product), or - long algebra calculations (law of sines/cosines and trigonometric identities). …
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How do we make a combined equation of a curve and a line?

How do we make a combined equation of a curve $$ax^2+2hxy+by^2+2gx+2fy+c=0$$ and line $$lx + my = n?$$
Ravi
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Example of a Monohedral Regular Heptagonal Polygon

I had asked Example of a heptagonal polyhedron? when looking for an example of a polyhedron with only heptagonal sides. The answers revealed that no such convex polyehdron exists; but that if one introduces topological holes it may still be…
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A supplementary construction

Let $ ABC $ an acute triangle and $O$ is the middle of $[BC] $ . Let $\mathcal {C} $ the circle with center in $O $ and radius $OA $. Let $AB\cap \mathcal{C}=\lbrace D \rbrace$ and $AC\cap \mathcal {C} =\lbrace E\rbrace $. If $ M $ is the…
rafa
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Regular octagon inscribed in a square

Problem: The corners of a 2 meter square are cut off to form a regular octagon. What is the length of the sides of the resulting octagon? From the picture below, the octagon would form a right isosceles, specifically a right isosceles triangle on…
Jayce
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Rectangle as a Union of Cubes

Can any closed rectangle in R^n be written as a countable union of pairwise disjoint closed cubes ? Justify . Can any closed rectangle in R^n be written as a finite union of pairwise disjoint closed cubes ? Justify . I can prove that it can be…
Ester
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How many pairwise distances are required to fix a rigid graph?

Given $N$ points $\{x_i\}$ in 3D space, and their pairwise distances $\{r_{ij}\}$, does anyone know what is the minimum number of pairwise distances are required to make the graph "fixed" and how do we find such pairs? I know that if three points…
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Is the Torricelli/Fermat point unique?

In a triangle with all angles less than 120 degrees can there be two such points? I am wondering because in the geometry game Euclidea it gives two "v-stars" for this problem (theta 8.6). This usually means that there are two solutions possible. I…
user1583209
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circles cover triangle

Please help to solve this question: three circles cover triangle. Can they still cover any triangle with decreased sides ? Thanks
user57041
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