Chapter 2 Construction Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used...

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Chapter 2 Construction Proving

Transcript of Chapter 2 Construction Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used...

Page 1: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Chapter 2

Construction Proving

Page 2: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Historical Background

• Euclid’s Elements

• Greek mathematicians used Straightedge Compass – draw circles, copy distances No measurement

Page 3: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Euclid’s Postulates

1. Given two distinct points P and Q, there is a line ( that is, there is exactly one line) that passes through P and Q.

2. Any line segment can be extended indefinitely.

3. Given two distinct points P and Q, a circle centered at P with radius PQ can be drawn.

4. Any two right angles are congruent.

Accepted as

axioms.

We will not

attempt to

prove them

Accepted as

axioms.

We will not

attempt to

prove them

Page 4: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Euclid’s Postulates

5. If two lines are intersected by a transversal in such a way that the sum of the degree measures of the two interior angles on one side of the transversal is less than the sum of two right angles, then the two lines meet on that side of the transversal.

(Accepted as an axiom for now)

Page 5: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Playfair’s Postulate

• Given any line l and any point P not on l , there is exactly one line through P that is parallel to l .

Page 6: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Euclid’s Postulates

FromWikimedia Commons

Page 7: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Congruence

• Ordinary meaning: Two things agree in nature or quality

• Mathematics: Exactly same size and shape Note: all circles have same shape, but not

same size

A CB

Page 8: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Congruence

• What does it take to guarantee two triangles congruent? SSS? ASA? SAS? SSA? AAS? AAA?

Page 9: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Congruence Criteria for Triangles

• SAS: If two sides and the included angle of one triangle are congruent to two sides and the included angle of another triangle, then the two triangles are congruent.

• We will accept this axiom without proof

Page 10: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Angle-Side-Angle Congruence

• State the Angle-Side-Angle criterion for triangle congruence (don’t look in the book)

• ASA: If two angles and the included side of one triangle are congruent respectively to two angles and the included angle of another triangle, then the two triangles are congruent

Page 11: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Angle-Side-Angle Congruence

• Proof

• Use negation

• Justify the steps in the proof on next slide

Page 12: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

ASA

• Assume AB DE

x DE AB DX

ABC DXF

C XFD

But given C EFD

AB DX DE

ABC DEF

Page 13: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Similarity

• Definition Exactly same shape, perhaps different size Note: What if A and B are same height or

same area? What does it take to guarantee similar

triangles? Any two polygons similar?

CBA

Page 14: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Similarity

• Similar triangles can be used to prove the Pythagorean theorem

Note which triangles are similar Note the resulting ratios

Page 15: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Constructions

• Be sure to use Geogebra to construct robust figures If a triangle is

meant to be equilateral, moving a vertex should keep it equilateral

Page 16: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Constructions

• Classic construction challenges

Doubling a cube

Squaring a circle

Trisecting an angle

Page 17: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Geometric Language Revisited

• Reminder Constructions limited to straight edge &

compass

• Straight edge for Line, line segment, ray

Page 18: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Geometric Language Revisited

• Typical constructions Finding midpoint Finding “center” (actually centers) of different

polygons Tangent to a circle (must be to radius) Angle bisector

• Note Geogebra has tools to do some of these without limits of compass, straightedge … OK to use most of time

Page 19: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Conditional Statements

• Implication P implies Q if P then Q

Page 20: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Conditional Statements

• Viviani’s TheoremIF a point P is interior toan equilateral triangle THEN the sum of the lengths of the perpendiculars from P to the sides of the triangle is equal to the altitude.

Page 21: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Conditional Statements

• What would make the hypothesis false?

• With false hypothesis, it still might be possible for the lengths to equal the altitude

Page 22: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Conditional Statements

• Consider a false conditional statement

IF two segments are diagonals of a trapezoidTHEN the diagonals bisect each other

• How can we rewrite this as a true statement

Page 23: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Conditional Statements

• Where is this on the truth table?

• We want the opposite

IF two segments are diagonals of a trapezoidTHEN the diagonals do not bisect each other

P Q P Q TRUE st

atem

ent

Page 24: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Robust Constructions & Proofs

• Robust construction in Geogebra Dynamic changes of vertices keep properties

that were constructed

• Shows specified relationship holds even when some of points, lines moved Note: robust sketch is technically not a proof

• Robust sketch will help formulate proof

Page 25: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Angles & Measuring

• Classifications of angles Right Acute Obtuse Straight

• Measured with Degrees Radians Gradients

Page 26: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Constructing Perpendiculars, Parallels

• Geogebra has tools for doing this

• In certain situationsthe text asks foruse of straight edge & compassonly

Page 27: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Properties of Triangles

• Classifications Equilateral Isosceles Scalene Right Obtuse Acute Similar

Page 28: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Properties of Triangles

• Consider relationships between interior angles and exterior angles.

• State your observations, conjectures

Page 29: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Properties of Triangles

• Conjecture 1 If an exterior angle is formed by extending

one side of a triangle, then this exterior angle will be larger than the interior angles at each of the other two vertices.

Page 30: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Properties of Triangles

• Conjecture 2 If an exterior angle is formed by extending

one side of a triangle, then the measure of this exterior angle will be the same as the sum of the measures of the two remote interior angles of the same triangle.

Page 31: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Properties of Triangles

• Corollary to Exterior Angle Theorem A perpendicular line from a point to a given

line is unique. In other words, from a specified point, there is only one line that is perpendicular to a given line.

• Proof by contradiction … assume two ’s

Page 32: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Euclid’s Fifth Postulate

• If a straight line falling on two straight lines makes the sum of the interior angles on the same side less than the sum of two right angles, then the two straight lines, if produced indefinitely, meet on that side on which the angles are less than two right angles.

Page 33: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Clavius’ Axiom

• The set of points equidistant from a given line on one side of it forms a straight line ( Hartshorne, 2000, 299).

Page 34: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Playfair’s Postulate

• Given any line and any point P not on , there is exactly one line through P that is parallel to .

Page 35: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Recall Euclid’s Postulates

1. Given two distinct points P and Q, there is a line ( that is, there is exactly one line) that passes through P and Q.

2. Any line segment can be extended indefinitely.

3. Given two distinct points P and Q, a circle centered at P with radius PQ can be drawn.

4. Any two right angles are congruent.

Page 36: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Use of Postulates for Constructions

• Use to prove possibility of construction Then use that result to establish next

• Example: Equilateral triangles can be constructed with a straight edge and compass Based on Proposition 1 in Elements

Page 37: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Use of Postulates for Constructions

• A line segment can be copied from one location to another with a straightedge and a compass. Based on Propositions 2 and 3 in the

Elements

This figure specified a “floppy” compass for the construction

Page 38: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Ideas about “Betweenness”

• Euclid took this for granted The order of points on a line

• Given any three collinear points One will be between the other two

Page 39: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Ideas about “Betweenness”

• When a line enters a triangle crossing side AB What are all the ways it can leave the

triangle?

Page 40: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Ideas about “Betweenness”

• Pasch’s theorem: If A, B, and C are distinct, non-collinear points and L is a line that intersects segment AB, then L also intersects either segment AC or segment BC.

• Note proof on pg 43

Page 41: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Ideas about “Betweenness”

• Crossbar Theorem:

• Use Pasch’s theorem to prove

If AD is between AC and AB ,

then AD intersects segment BC.

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Page 42: Chapter 2 Construction  Proving. Historical Background Euclid’s Elements Greek mathematicians used  Straightedge  Compass – draw circles, copy distances.

Chapter 2

Construction Proving