Crossbar theorem
In geometry, the crossbar theorem states that if ray AD is between ray AC and ray AB, then ray AD intersects line segment BC.[1]
This result is one of the deeper results in axiomatic plane geometry.[2] It is often used in proofs to justify the statement that a line through a vertex of a triangle lying inside the triangle meets the side of the triangle opposite that vertex. This property was often used by Euclid in his proofs without explicit justification.[3]
Some modern treatments (not Euclid's) of the proof of the theorem that the base angles of an isosceles triangle are congruent start like this: Let ABC be a triangle with side AB congruent to side AC. Draw the angle bisector of angle A and let D be the point at which it meets side BC. And so on. The justification for the existence of point D is the often unstated crossbar theorem. For this particular result, other proofs exist which do not require the use of the crossbar theorem.[4]
See also
[edit | edit source]Notes
[edit | edit source]- ^ Greenberg 1974, p. 69
- ^ Kay 1993, p. 122
- ^ Blau 2003, p. 135
- ^ Moise 1974, p. 70
References
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