Coordinate Proofs with Quadrilaterals
Coordinate Proofs with Quadrilaterals
A coordinate proof uses algebra on the coordinate plane to prove geometric properties. When working with quadrilaterals, we can determine whether a shape is a general quadrilateral, parallelogram, rectangle, rhombus, or square by analyzing the coordinates of its vertices.
The Three Essential Formulas
To write coordinate proofs, you only need three basic algebraic formulas:
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Distance Formula: Used to prove sides or diagonals are equal in length (congruent). d=(x2ââx1â)2+(y2âây1â)2â
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Slope Formula: Used to prove lines are parallel (equal slopes) or perpendicular (slopes are negative reciprocals, meaning m1ââ m2â=â1). m=x2ââx1ây2âây1ââ
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Midpoint Formula: Used to prove diagonals bisect each other (they share the exact same midpoint). M=(2x1â+x2ââ,2y1â+y2ââ)
Proving Specific Quadrilaterals
Depending on what you want to prove, you can choose the most efficient formula:
- Parallelogram: Prove both pairs of opposite sides are parallel (Slope Formula) OR prove the diagonals bisect each other (Midpoint Formula).
- Rectangle: First prove it is a parallelogram, then prove one interior angle is 90â (Slope Formula for perpendicular adjacent sides) OR prove the diagonals are congruent (Distance Formula).
- Rhombus: First prove it is a parallelogram, then prove adjacent sides are congruent (Distance Formula) OR prove the diagonals are perpendicular (Slope Formula).
- Square: Prove it has the properties of both a rectangle (congruent diagonals / right angles) and a rhombus (perpendicular diagonals / congruent sides).
Example: Proving a Parallelogram
Problem: Prove that the quadrilateral with vertices A(1,1), B(4,1), C(5,4), and D(2,4) is a parallelogram using slopes.
Step 1: Find the slope of opposite sides AB and DC.
- Slope of AB: mABâ=4â11â1â=30â=0
- Slope of DC: mDCâ=5â24â4â=30â=0
Since mABâ=mDCâ, side AB is parallel to side DC.
Step 2: Find the slope of opposite sides AD and BC.
- Slope of AD: mADâ=2â14â1â=13â=3
- Slope of BC: mBCâ=5â44â1â=13â=3
Since mADâ=mBCâ, side AD is parallel to side BC.
Conclusion: Because both pairs of opposite sides have equal slopes, they are parallel. Therefore, quadrilateral ABCD is a parallelogram.