Solving an Electric Field Problem in Equilateral Triangle Geometry

  • Thread starter Thread starter pyroknife
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Confused
Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
5 replies · 6K views
pyroknife
Messages
611
Reaction score
4
This is from a electric field problem I'm trying to solve. This part I'm asking is geometry. I'm trying to find the distance from a corner of a equilateral triangle to its center. Also, I have to find the distance from the midpoint of a baseline to the center of the triangle.

Let's assume each side length is 2. Let's also assume that a corner lies at the top and the 2 other corners lie at the bottom like this pic http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...quilateral.svg . So I divide the triangle in half to find its height through the pythagorean theorem. 2^2-(2/2)^2=3. sqrt(3)=height. Then I divided the height by 2 and got .866 (using decimals cause idk how to type a square root symbol.) So wouldn't the .866 be the distance from the center to the midpoint of the baseline? Also, wouldn't it make it the distance from the top corner of the triangle to the center?? If that's the case doesn't that contradict the belief that all 3 corners have the same distance to the center of a equilateral triangle.

But when you calculate the distance from the corner to the center. You use the pythagorean thereom again. You have 1 for the base length and .866 for the height right? That gives you a hypotenuse of sqrt(1.75) which doesn't equal .866?

Can someone explain this to me please.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
on Phys.org
pyroknife said:
This is from a electric field problem I'm trying to solve. This part I'm asking is geometry. I'm trying to find the distance from a corner of a equilateral triangle to its center. Also, I have to find the distance from the midpoint of a baseline to the center of the triangle.

Let's assume each side length is 2. Let's also assume that a corner lies at the top and the 2 other corners lie at the bottom like this pic http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...quilateral.svg . So I divide the triangle in half to find its height through the pythagorean theorem. 2^2-(2/2)^2=3. sqrt(3)=height. Then I divided the height by 2 and got .866 (using decimals cause idk how to type a square root symbol.) So wouldn't the .866 be the distance from the center to the midpoint of the baseline? Also, wouldn't it make it the distance from the top corner of the triangle to the center?? If that's the case doesn't that contradict the belief that all 3 corners have the same distance to the center of a equilateral triangle.

But when you calculate the distance from the corner to the center. You use the pythagorean thereom again. You have 1 for the base length and .866 for the height right? That gives you a hypotenuse of sqrt(1.75) which doesn't equal .866?

Can someone explain this to me please.

You DO NOT divide height by 2 to find the distance to the center. The center lies along an angle bisector from each corner. Draw another triangle. Use trig.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Okay so the new triangle you draw. The hypotenuse goes from the corner to the center right? And the base would be 1 and the height would be .866? Also, is the midpoint of the base to the center .866 also
 
[itex]sin(30°) = 1/2[/itex]
[itex]cos(30°) = \frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}[/itex]

In a 30-60-90 triangle (angles), the sides have relationships 1 - 2 - [itex]\sqrt{3}[/itex], where side of relative length 2 is on the hypotenuse.

attachment.php?attachmentid=38397&stc=1&d=1314676804.gif
 

Attachments

  • Fig1.gif
    Fig1.gif
    1.3 KB · Views: 1,579
pyroknife said:
Okay so the new triangle you draw. The hypotenuse goes from the corner to the center right? And the base would be 1 and the height would be .866? Also, is the midpoint of the base to the center .866 also

The base would be 1 and the vertex angle would be pi/6, right? That doesn't make the height sqrt(3)/2. It's different.