Geometry (from the Ancient Greek: geo- "earth", -metron "measurement") is a branch of mathematics, that is primarily concerned with the shapes and sizes of the objects, their relative position, and the properties of space. There are many postulates and theorems applied by the Greek mathematician Euclid, who is often referred to as the “Father of Geometry”. Let us explore all the important topics in Geometry.
Geometry is the branch of mathematics that relates the principles covering distances, angles, patterns, areas, and volumes. All the visually and spatially related concepts are categorized under geometry. There are three types of geometry:
We study Euclidean geometry to understand the fundamentals of geometry. Euclidean Geometry refers to the study of plane and solid figures on the basis of axioms (a statement or proposition) and theorems. The fundamental concepts of Euclidean geometry include Points and Lines, Euclid’s Axioms and Postulates, Geometrical Proof, and Euclid’s Fifth Postulate. There are 5 basic postulates of Euclidean Geometry that define geometrical figures.
Axioms or postulates are based on assumptions and have no proof for them. A few of Euclid's axioms in geometry that are universally accepted are:
Spherical geometry and hyperbolic geometry are the two non-Euclidean geometries. Non-Euclidean geometry differs in its postulates on the nature of the parallel lines and the angles in the planar space, as validated by Euclidean geometry.
Euclidean geometry involves the study of geometry in a plane. A two-dimensional surface extending infinitely in both directions forms the plane. Planes are used in every area of geometry and graph theory. The basic components of planes in geometry are analogous to points, lines, and angles. A point is the no-dimensional basic unit of geometry. Points lying on the same line are the collinear points. A line is a uni-dimensional unit that refers to a set of points that extends in two opposite directions and the line is said to be the intersection of two planes. A line has no endpoints. It is easy to differentiate a line, line segment, and ray. Lines may be parallel or perpendicular. Lines may or not intersect.
When two straight lines or rays intersect at a point, they form an angle. Angles are usually measured in degrees. The angles can be an acute, obtuse, right angle, straight angle, or obtuse angle. The pairs of angles can be supplementary or complementary. The construction of angles and lines is an intricate component of geometry. The study of angles in a unit circle and that of a triangle forms the stepping stone of trigonometry. Transversals and related angles establish the interesting properties of parallel lines and their theorems.
The properties of plane shapes help us identify and classify them. The plane geometric shapes are two-dimensional shapes or flat shapes. Polygons are closed curves that are made up of more than two lines. A triangle is a closed figure with three sides and three vertices. There are many theorems based on the triangles that help us understand the properties of triangles. In geometry, the most significant theorems based on triangles include Heron's formula, The exterior angle theorem, the angle sum property, the basic proportionality theorem, the similarity and Congruence in Triangles, the Pythagoras Theorem, and so on. These help us recognize the angle-side relationships in triangles. Quadrilaterals are polygons with four sides and four vertices. A circle is a closed figure and has no edges or corners. It is defined as the set of all points in a plane that are equidistant from a given point called the center of the circle. Various concepts centered around symmetry, transformations in shapes, construction of shapes are the formative chapters in geometry.
Solid shapes in geometry are three-dimensional in nature. The three dimensions that are taken into consideration are length, width, and height. There are different types of solid figures like a cylinder, cube, sphere, cone, cuboids, prism, pyramids, and so on and these figures acquire some space. They are characterized by vertices, faces, and edges. The five platonic solids and the polyhedrons have interesting properties in Euclidean space. The nets of the plane shapes can be folded into solids.
Measurement in geometry ascertains the calculation of length or distance, the area occupied by a flat shape, and the volume occupied by the solid objects. Mensuration in geometry is applied to the computation of perimeter, area, capacity, surface areas, and volumes of geometric figures. Perimeter is the distance around the plane shapes, the area is the region occupied by the shape, volume is the amount of region occupied by a solid, and the surface area of a solid is the sum of the areas of its faces.
Analytical geometry is popularly known as coordinate geometry is a branch of geometry where the position of any given point on a plane is defined with the help of an ordered pair of numbers, or coordinates using the rectangular Cartesian coordinate system. The coordinate axes divide the plane into four quadrants. Identifying and plotting points will be a building block of visualizing the geometric objects on the coordinate plane. In the example below, point A is defined as (4,3) and Point B is defined as (-3,1).
The various properties of the geometric figures like straight lines, curves, parabolas, ellipse, hyperbola, circles, and so on can be studied using coordinate geometry. In analytical geometry, the curves are represented as algebraic equations, and this gives a deeper understanding of algebraic equations through visual representations. The distance formula, the section formula, midpoint formula, the centroid of a triangle, the area of the triangle formed by three given points, and the area of the quadrilateral formed by four points are determined using the known coordinates in the cartesian coordinate system. The equation of a straight line passing through a point, or two points, the angle between two straight lines are computed easily using the analytical geometry as they are generalized using formulas.
The three-dimensional geometry discusses the geometry of shapes in 3D space in the cartesian planes. Every point in the space is denoted by 3 coordinates, represented as an ordered triple (x, y,z) of real numbers.
If a straight line makes angles α, β and γ with the x-axis, y-axis, and z-axis respectively then cosα, cosβ, cosγ are called the direction cosines of a line. These are denoted as l = cosα, m = cosβ, and n = cosγ. For l, m, and n, l2 + m2 + n2 = 1, direction cosines of a line joining the points P( x1 , y 1 , z 1 ) and Q( x2 , y2 , z2 ) are given as :where
The directional ratios of a line are the numbers that are proportional to the direct cosines of the line. If l, m, n are the direction cosines, and a,b c are the direction ratios, then
Direction ratios of line joining the points P( x1 , y 1 , z 1 ) and Q( x2 , y2 , z2 ) are: ( x2 − x1 ) , ( y2 − y 1 ) , ( z2 − z 1 ) or ( x1 − x2 ) , ( y 1 − y2 ) , ( z 1 − z2 )
The skew lines are the lines in space that are neither parallel nor intersecting, and they lie in different planes. The angle between two lines is cos θ = | l 1 l 2 + m 1 m 2 + n 1 n 2 | where θ is the acute angle between the lines.
Also Cos θ =
Vector equation of the line passing through a point with the position vector → a and parallel to vector → b is → r = → a + λ → b
Cartesian equation of the line passing through the point ( x1 , y 1 , z 1 ) and direction cosines l, m, n is
Vector equation of the line passing through two points with the position vectors → a and → b is → r = → a + λ ( → b − → a )
Cartesian equation of the line passing through the points ( x1 , y 1 , z 1 ) and ( x2 , y2 , z2) is
Angle between intersecting lines drawn parallel to each of the skew lines is the angle between skew lines. If θ is the angle between → r = → a 1 + λ → b 1 and → r = → a 2 + λ → b 2 , then cos θ
53 videos|44 docs|59 tests
|
|
Explore Courses for Class 4 exam
|