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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Sum of areas of triangles

Let $ABC$ an equilateral triangle and $O$ a point in interior of $ABC$. Consider $M, N, P$ the projections on the sides $AB, BC, AC$. Then the sum of areas of triangles $ AOM, BON, COP$ is the same like the sum of areas of …
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Geometry of a machine to carve a stone into a sphere?

I was learning how they make stone spheres recently, and they have a great machine for working with spheres which are irregular by 10-20 percent, it's 3 rotating abrasive cups.(yt videos) However they first angle grind an octogon of stone by hand,…
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Given a perimeter and a number of edges what shape has the greatest area?

So given a perimeter of total length $L$ and $n$ edges that the shape must have what is the shape that maximizes the area? The answer is probably a regular $n$-gon with lengths of $L/n$ but how do I prove it? The motivation for the problem: I was…
mtheorylord
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Why are tangent circles entirely inside or outside the other?

I'm trying to formally show that if two circles $\Gamma$ and $\Gamma'$ are tangent at $A$, then $\Gamma'$ lies either entirely inside or entirely outside $\Gamma$. The one particular case I'm struggling with is when $\Gamma$ and $\Gamma'$ lie on the…
yunone
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How can this "illegal geometry" problem be possible?

Using 2 triangles each with base of 8 and height of 3, and 2 trapezoids with heights of 3 on top, 5 on bottom and height of 5, these four figures can create an area with 64 units squared. However, when rearranged as a rectangle with 13 x 5=65, one…
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Find the area of the shaded region of this figure

Find the area of the shaded region. (Each arcs of circles in the figure are assumed to be $\frac{1}{4}$ of a full circle)
Kitiara
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What is the smallest n-gon such that there can be an interior point further from all boundary points than the points are from each of their neighbors?

This is a "sequel" question to What is the maximum n-gon such that there can't be an interior point further from all boundary points than the boundary points are from each other? In the previous question I asked: Given a polygon with n vertices,…
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Basic geometry problem question (Segment intersections?)

The Problem So, I was able to solve this problem, but what I'm curious of is once we solve the variables can I extend point F to line BC making Triangle ABX? I imagine an extension of point F would have to lie on BC at some point and intersect it.…
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How do I represent an equilateral triangle in cartesian coordinates centered around (0,0) knowing the length of one of the sides

I am trying to figure out how to find the Cartesian coordinates of an equilateral triangle centered around (0,0).
TheMathNoob
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Angle Measurements Involving Arcs

I'm currently taking a geometry class and studying circles. On the homework, I found these two problems and I'm not sure how to approach them. The task is to find the measurements of x, y, and z. On the first problem, I can figure out that y is 25…
Ben
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Points placing in plane

This is famous puzzle that I can came across recently. Place six points on a plane so that distance between any two points is integer such that no three points are collinear. In 3D it is easy( pyramid) but how to do this in case of 2D?
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Trapped in a hyper cube.

Our role playing group got stuck in a hypercube. I recognized it as a hypercube, when after travelling "south" 4 times, I ended up in a loop, and counted 8 rooms. After the game the GM showed me this map If I swapped the NS EW UP pairs, for NE WU…
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Writing geometric lines and planes as sets

I am investigating some differences between geometry in $\mathbb R^2$ and $\mathbb R^3$. Define a line in the $\mathbb R^2$ as the set $\{(x,y)\in \mathbb R^2 : ax+by=c\}$ for fixed $a,b\in \mathbb R$ with $(a,b)\ne (0,0)$. Likewise, define a…
CuriousKid7
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Geometry problem - perpendicular line to angle bisector

Here is my question: Let $\triangle ABC$ and let $K,L$ be midpoints of $AC$ and $AB$ respectively. Let $D$ be some point on $AC$ (between $K$ and $C$) such that $KD=AL$. Show that the perpendicular line from $D$ to the angle bisector of $A$…
y12
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Moving along circles

For each natural number $k$. Let $C_k$ denote the circle with radius $k$ centimetres and centre at origin. On the circle $C_k$ a particle moves $k$ centimetres in the counter - clockwise direction. After completing its motion on $C_k$ the…
Abcd
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