Quadrilateral

In Euclidean plane geometry, a quadrilateral is a polygon with four sides (or 'edges') and four vertices or corners. Sometimes, the term quadrangle is used, by analogy with triangle, and sometimes tetragon for consistency with pentagon (5-sided), hexagon (6-sided) and so on. The word quadrilateral is made of the words quad (meaning "four") and lateral (meaning "of sides").

Quadrilaterals are simple (not self-intersecting) or complex (self-intersecting), also called crossed. Simple quadrilaterals are either convex or concave.

The interior angles of a simple quadrilateral add up to 360 degrees of arc. In a crossed quadrilateral, the interior angles on either side of the crossing add up to 720°.[1]

All convex quadrilaterals tile the plane by repeated rotation around the midpoints of their edges.

Contents

Convex quadrilaterals - parallelograms

A parallelogram is a quadrilateral with two pairs of parallel sides. Equivalent conditions are that opposite sides are of equal length; that opposite angles are equal; or that the diagonals bisect each other. Parallelograms also include the square, rectangle, rhombus and rhomboid.

A shape that is both a rhombus (four equal sides) and a rectangle (four equal angles) is a square (four equal sides and four equal angles).

Square → Rhombus → Parallelogram (opposite sides are parallel) → Quadrilateral (four-sided polygon)

Convex quadrilaterals - other

Quadrilaterals.svg

Area of a convex quadrilateral

There are various general formulas for the area of a convex quadrilateral.

The area of a quadrilateral ABCD can be calculated using vectors. Let vectors AC and BD form the diagonals from A to C and from B to D. The area of the quadrilateral is then

\frac{1}{2} |{AC}\times{BD}|,

which is the magnitude of the cross product of vectors AC and BD. In two-dimensional Euclidean space, expressing vector AC as a free vector in Cartesian space equal to (x1,y1) and BD as (x2,y2), this can be rewritten as:



\frac{1}{2} |x_1 y_2 - x_2 y_1|.\,

and is equal to

\frac{1}{2}p q \cdot sin \theta,

where the lengths of the diagonals are p and q and the angle between them is \theta.[2]

Bretschneider's formula[3] expresses the area in terms of the sides and angles:

Area = \sqrt{(s-a)(s-b)(s-c)(s-d)- \tfrac {1}{2}abcd[1+ cos(\gamma + \lambda )]}
 = \sqrt{(s-a)(s-b)(s-c)(s-d)- abcd[cos^{2}(\tfrac {\gamma + \lambda}{2})]},

where the sides in sequence are a,b,c,d, s is the semiperimeter, and \gamma and \lambda are any two opposite angles. This reduces to Brahmagupta's formula for the area of a cyclic quadrilateral when  \gamma + \lambda = 180°.

Another area formula in terms of the sides and angles, with \gamma being between sides b and c and \lambda being between sides a and d, is

Area=\tfrac{1}{2}bc \cdot sin \gamma + \tfrac{1}{2}ad \cdot sin \lambda.

Next,[4] the following formula expresses the area in terms of the sides and diagonals:

Area = \sqrt{(s-a)(s-b)(s-c)(s-d)- \tfrac{1}{4}(ac+bd+pq)(ac+bd-pq)}
 = \tfrac{1}{4} \sqrt{4p^{2}q^{2}-(a^{2}+c^{2}-b^{2}-d^{2})^{2}},

where p and q are the diagonals. Again, this reduces to Brahmagupta's formula in the cyclic quadrilateral case, since then pq=ac+bd.

Alternatively, we can write the area in terms of the sides and the intersection angle \theta of the diagonals, so long as this angle is not 90°:[5]

Area = \frac{|tan \theta|}{4}|a^{2}+c^{2}-b^{2}-d^{2}|.

In the case of a parallelogram, the latter formula becomes Area=\tfrac {|tan \theta |}{2}|a^{2}-b^{2}|.

The area of a rhombus is given by \tfrac{1}{2}pq for diagonals p,q.

The area of a parallelogram with sides a and b and angles C and 180°-C is ab \cdot sin \ \ C.

The area of a cyclic quadrilateral with successive sides a, b, c, d and angle \gamma between sides b and c is

Area=\tfrac{1}{2}(sin \gamma)(bc+ad).

More quadrilaterals

Miscellaneous facts about quadrilaterals

\tfrac{1}{FG}=\tfrac{1}{2}(\tfrac{1}{AB}+ \tfrac{1}{DC}).
\tfrac {p}{q}= \tfrac{ad+cb}{ab+cd},
p^{2}= \tfrac{(ac+bd)(ad+bc)}{ab+cd},

and

q^{2}= \tfrac{(ac+bd)(ab+dc)}{ad+bc}.
\tfrac{1}{4} \sqrt{\tfrac{(ab+cd)(ac+bd)(ad+bc)}{(s-a)(s-b)(s-c)(s-d)}}.
p^{2}+q^{2} = a^{2}+b^{2}+c^{2}+d^{2}.
(AP)^{2}+(CP)^{2}=(BP)^{2}+(DP)^{2}.

Taxonomy

A taxonomy of quadrilaterals is illustrated by the following graph. Lower forms are special cases of higher forms. Note that "trapezium" here is referring to the British definition (the North American equivalent is a trapezoid), and "kite" excludes the concave kite (arrowhead or dart). Inclusive definitions are used throughout.

Taxonomy of quadrilaterals. Lower forms are special cases of higher forms.

References

  1. Stars: A Second Look
  2. Harries, J. "Area of a quadrilateral," Mathematical Gazette 86, July 2002, 310-311.
  3. R. A. Johnson, Advanced Euclidean Geometry, 2007, Dover Publ., p. 82.
  4. E. W. Weisstein, "Bretschneider's formula," from MathWorld -- A Wolfram Web Resource. http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Bretschneider'sFormula.html
  5. Mitchell, Douglas W., "The area of a quadrilateral," Mathematical Gazette 93, July 2009, 306-309.
  6. Hoehn, Larry, "Circumradius of a cyclic quadrilateral," Mathematical Gazette 84, March 2000, 69-70.

External links