Menelaus' theorem
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Menelaus' theorem, attributed to Menelaus of Alexandria, is a theorem about triangles in plane geometry. Given points A, B, C that form triangle ABC, and points D, E, F that lie on lines BC, AC, AB, then the theorem states that D, E, F are collinear if and only if:
- [\frac \cdot \frac \cdot \frac = -1]
Proof
This is one of many proofs for this theorem. The sign of the left-hand side of the theorem's equation can be checked. Line DEF must intersect the sides of triangle ABC an even number of times—either twice altogether, if it passes into the triangle and out again (upper diagram), or not at all, if it misses the triangle (lower diagram). Hence there are an odd number of negative terms, and the total product is negative.
Next, the magnitude can be checked. Construct line segments that connect line DEF perpendicularly with vertices A, B, and C. With DEF as the base, let the altitudes of A, B, and C be a, b, and c. By similar triangles, the absolute value of the left-hand side of the theorem simplifies to:
- [ \left| \frac \cdot \frac \cdot \frac \right| = 1]
- [ \frac = \frac ]
- [ \frac = \frac ]
Ptolemy used Menelaus' theorem as the basis for his spherical trigonometry in the Almagest.
See also
External links
- [Alternate proof] of Menelaus' theorem, from PlanetMath
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