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Proportionality Theorems

Proportionality Theorems

When studying similar triangles, certain geometric setups create predictable proportional relationships between line segments. Here are the three most important proportionality theorems you need to know.

Triangle Proportionality Theorem (Side-Splitter Theorem)

If a line is parallel to one side of a triangle and intersects the other two sides, then it divides those two sides proportionally.

If line segment DEDE is parallel to side BCBC (DEโˆฅBCDE \parallel BC), then: ADDB=AEEC\frac{AD}{DB} = \frac{AE}{EC}

Example: In โ–ณABC\triangle ABC, DEโˆฅBCDE \parallel BC with AD=4AD = 4, DB=6DB = 6, and AE=5AE = 5. Find ECEC.

Solution: Set up the proportion using the theorem: 46=5EC\frac{4}{6} = \frac{5}{EC} Cross-multiply to solve for ECEC: 4โ‹…EC=6โ‹…54 \cdot EC = 6 \cdot 5 4โ‹…EC=304 \cdot EC = 30 EC=7.5EC = 7.5

Triangle Angle Bisector Theorem

An angle bisector of a triangle divides the opposite side into two segments that are proportional to the lengths of the other two sides of the triangle.

If line segment ADAD bisects โˆ A\angle A in โ–ณABC\triangle ABC, intersecting side BCBC at point DD, then: BDDC=ABAC\frac{BD}{DC} = \frac{AB}{AC}

Geometric Mean (Altitude) Theorem

In a right triangle, the altitude drawn from the right angle to the hypotenuse divides the hypotenuse into two segments. The length of the altitude is the geometric mean of the lengths of those two segments.

If CDCD is the altitude drawn to the hypotenuse ABAB of right โ–ณABC\triangle ABC, then: ADCD=CDDBโ€…โ€ŠโŸนโ€…โ€ŠCD2=ADโ‹…DB\frac{AD}{CD} = \frac{CD}{DB} \implies CD^2 = AD \cdot DB

Example: In right โ–ณABC\triangle ABC with altitude CDCD to the hypotenuse, if AD=3AD = 3 and DB=12DB = 12, find CDCD.

Solution: Using the geometric mean theorem: CD2=ADโ‹…DBCD^2 = AD \cdot DB CD2=3โ‹…12CD^2 = 3 \cdot 12 CD2=36CD^2 = 36 Take the square root of both sides: CD=6CD = 6