momentum said:
yes...probabily you are right.
in fact i don't know the details.
all i know is , a median is divided into 2:1 ratio sometimes ...but when ? i don't know. ...thats what i want to know.
can you please tell when does it occur ?
does it occur when 3 medians intersects each other ?
well, suppose 3 medians intersect each other, so that means each of the median is divided into 2:1 ratio ...but which portion is 2 and which portion is 1 ?
does the
top-->center=2
and
center-->bottom(middle of a side)=1
is this correct ?
Please provide me a tutorial.
i want to know about this thing.
i could not search "google" becuase i don't know what search keywords i should use to search .
thank you
In the post #5, I did provide you the link to a wikipedia article about
triangle. In the article, you will fnd a part that tells you something about the centroid. It's in the
Points, lines and circles associated with a triangle section (number 3).
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I'll give you a brief explanation if you want. But I may say, my terminology is not the best.
Let ABC be a triangle, and AM be one of its median. M \in BC
We define the point G on the line segment AM such that:
\frac{AG}{GM} = \frac{2}{1} \quad \mbox{or} \quad \frac{AG}{AM} = \frac{2}{3} \quad \mbox{or} \quad \frac{MG}{AM} = \frac{1}{3}.
Then G is the centroid of the triangle ABC.
That is, the median BN, and CK pass through G.
And if we have 3 medians AM, BN, CK, they will intersect each other at
only one point, namely G (the centroid).
Can you get it? :)