Thales's theorem explained

In geometry, Thales's theorem states that if,, and are distinct points on a circle where the line is a diameter, the angle is a right angle. Thales's theorem is a special case of the inscribed angle theorem and is mentioned and proved as part of the 31st proposition in the third book of Euclid's Elements.[1] It is generally attributed to Thales of Miletus, but it is sometimes attributed to Pythagoras.

History

Babylonian mathematicians knew this for special cases before Greek mathematicians proved it.[2]

Thales of Miletus (early 6th century BC) is traditionally credited with proving the theorem; however, even by the 5th century BC there was nothing extant of Thales' writing, and inventions and ideas were attributed to men of wisdom such as Thales and Pythagoras by later doxographers based on hearsay and speculation.[3] [4] Reference to Thales was made by Proclus (5th century AD), and by Diogenes Laërtius (3rd century AD) documenting Pamphila's (1st century AD) statement that Thales "was the first to inscribe in a circle a right-angle triangle".[5]

Thales was claimed to have traveled to Egypt and Babylonia, where he is supposed to have learned about geometry and astronomy and thence brought their knowledge to the Greeks, along the way inventing the concept of geometric proof and proving various geometric theorems. However, there is no direct evidence for any of these claims, and they were most likely invented speculative rationalizations. Modern scholars believe that Greek deductive geometry as found in Euclid's Elements was not developed until the 4th century BC, and any geometric knowledge Thales may have had would have been observational.[6]

The theorem appears in Book III of Euclid's Elements as proposition 31: "In a circle the angle in the semicircle is right, that in a greater segment less than a right angle, and that in a less segment greater than a right angle; further the angle of the greater segment is greater than a right angle, and the angle of the less segment is less than a right angle."

Dante Alighieri's Paradiso (canto 13, lines 101–102) refers to Thales's theorem in the course of a speech.

Proof

First proof

The following facts are used: the sum of the angles in a triangle is equal to 180° and the base angles of an isosceles triangle are equal.

Since, and are isosceles triangles, and by the equality of the base angles of an isosceles triangle, and .

Let and . The three internal angles of the triangle are,, and . Since the sum of the angles of a triangle is equal to 180°, we have

\begin{align} \alpha+(\alpha+\beta)+\beta&=180\circ\\ 2\alpha+2\beta&=180\circ\\ 2(\alpha+\beta)&=180\circ\\ \therefore\alpha+\beta&=90\circ. \end{align}

Q.E.D.

Second proof

The theorem may also be proven using trigonometry: Let,, and . Then is a point on the unit circle . We will show that forms a right angle by proving that and are perpendicular — that is, the product of their slopes is equal to −1. We calculate the slopes for and :

\begin{align} mAB&=

yB-yA
xB-xA

=

\sin\theta
\cos\theta+1

\\[2pt] mBC&=

yC-yB
xC-xB

=

-\sin\theta
-\cos\theta+1

\end{align}

Then we show that their product equals −1:

\begin{align} &mABmBC\\[4pt] ={}&

\sin\theta
\cos\theta+1

-\sin\theta
-\cos\theta+1

\\[4pt] ={}&

-\sin2\theta
-\cos2\theta+1

\\[4pt] ={}&

-\sin2\theta
\sin2\theta

\\[4pt] ={}&{-1} \end{align}

\sin2\theta+\cos2\theta=1.

Third proof

Let be a triangle in a circle where is a diameter in that circle. Then construct a new triangle by mirroring over the line and then mirroring it again over the line perpendicular to which goes through the center of the circle. Since lines and are parallel, likewise for and, the quadrilateral is a parallelogram. Since lines and, the diagonals of the parallelogram, are both diameters of the circle and therefore have equal length, the parallelogram must be a rectangle. All angles in a rectangle are right angles.

Converse

For any triangle, and, in particular, any right triangle, there is exactly one circle containing all three vertices of the triangle. (Sketch of proof. The locus of points equidistant from two given points is a straight line that is called the perpendicular bisector of the line segment connecting the points. The perpendicular bisectors of any two sides of a triangle intersect in exactly one point. This point must be equidistant from the vertices of the triangle.) This circle is called the circumcircle of the triangle.

One way of formulating Thales's theorem is: if the center of a triangle's circumcircle lies on the triangle then the triangle is right, and the center of its circumcircle lies on its hypotenuse.

The converse of Thales's theorem is then: the center of the circumcircle of a right triangle lies on its hypotenuse. (Equivalently, a right triangle's hypotenuse is a diameter of its circumcircle.)

Proof of the converse using geometry

This proof consists of 'completing' the right triangle to form a rectangle and noticing that the center of that rectangle is equidistant from the vertices and so is the center of the circumscribing circle of the original triangle, it utilizes two facts:

Let there be a right angle, a line parallel to passing by, and a line parallel to passing by . Let be the point of intersection of lines and . (It has not been proven that lies on the circle.)

The quadrilateral forms a parallelogram by construction (as opposite sides are parallel). Since in a parallelogram adjacent angles are supplementary (add to 180°) and is a right angle (90°) then angles are also right (90°); consequently is a rectangle.

Let be the point of intersection of the diagonals and . Then the point, by the second fact above, is equidistant from,, and . And so is center of the circumscribing circle, and the hypotenuse of the triangle is a diameter of the circle.

Alternate proof of the converse using geometry

Given a right triangle with hypotenuse, construct a circle whose diameter is . Let be the center of . Let be the intersection of and the ray . By Thales's theorem, is right. But then must equal . (If lies inside, would be obtuse, and if lies outside, would be acute.)

Proof of the converse using linear algebra

This proof utilizes two facts:

Let there be a right angle and circle with as a diameter.Let M's center lie on the origin, for easier calculation.Then we know

It follows

\begin{align} 0&=(A-B)(B-C)\\ &=(A-B)(B+A)\\ &=|A|2-|B|2.\\[4pt] \therefore|A|&=|B|. \end{align}

This means that and are equidistant from the origin, i.e. from the center of . Since lies on, so does, and the circle is therefore the triangle's circumcircle.

The above calculations in fact establish that both directions of Thales's theorem are valid in any inner product space.

Generalizations and related results

As stated above, Thales's theorem is a special case of the inscribed angle theorem (the proof of which is quite similar to the first proof of Thales's theorem given above):

Given three points, and on a circle with center, the angle is twice as large as the angle .A related result to Thales's theorem is the following:

Applications

Constructing a tangent to a circle passing through a point

Thales's theorem can be used to construct the tangent to a given circle that passes through a given point. In the figure at right, given circle with centre and the point outside, bisect at and draw the circle of radius with centre . is a diameter of this circle, so the triangles connecting OP to the points and where the circles intersect are both right triangles.

Finding the centre of a circle

Thales's theorem can also be used to find the centre of a circle using an object with a right angle, such as a set square or rectangular sheet of paper larger than the circle.[7] The angle is placed anywhere on its circumference (figure 1). The intersections of the two sides with the circumference define a diameter (figure 2). Repeating this with a different set of intersections yields another diameter (figure 3). The centre is at the intersection of the diameters.

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Heath, Thomas L. . 1956 . The Thirteen Books of Euclid's Elements . 2 (Books 3–9) . 2nd . Dover . 0486600890 . 61 . Originally published by Cambridge University Press. 1st edition 1908, 2nd edition 1926.
  2. de Laet, Siegfried J. (1996). History of Humanity: Scientific and Cultural Development. UNESCO, Volume 3, p. 14.
  3. Dicks . D. R. . Thales . The Classical Quarterly . 1959 . 9 . 2 . 294–309 .
  4. Web site: G. Donald . Allen . Thales of Miletus . 2000 . 2012-02-12.
  5. Patronis . Tasos . Patsopoulos . Dimitris . January 2006 . The Theorem of Thales: A Study of the Naming of Theorems in School Geometry Textbooks . The International Journal for the History of Mathematics Education . 1932-8826 . https://scholar.archive.org/work/v5rgnrodundl3kcxvvkdi7hz5q/access/wayback/http://journals.tc-library.org/index.php/hist_math_ed/article/viewFile/189/184 . dead . 2018-04-25 . 57–68.
  6. Book: Sidoli, Nathan . 2018 . Greek mathematics . Jones . A. . Taub . L. . The Cambridge History of Science: Vol. 1, Ancient Science . Cambridge University Press . 345–373 . http://individual.utoronto.ca/acephalous/Sidoli_2018c.pdf .
  7. https://books.google.com/books?id=9jASBwAAQBAJ&pg=PA183 Resources for Teaching Mathematics: 14–16