Lesson 16
Weighted Averages in a Triangle
- Let’s partition special line segments in triangles.
16.1: Triangle Midpoints
Triangle \(ABC\) is graphed.
Find the midpoint of each side of this triangle.
16.2: Triangle Medians
Your teacher will tell you how to draw and label the medians of the triangle in the warm-up.
- After the medians are drawn and labeled, measure all 6 segments inside the triangle using centimeters. What is the ratio of the 2 parts of each median?
- Find the coordinates of the point that partitions segment \(AN\) in a \(2:1\) ratio.
- Find the coordinates of the point that partitions segment \(BL\) in a \(2:1\) ratio.
- Find the coordinates of the point that partitions segment \(CM\) in a \(2:1\) ratio.
In the image, \(AB\) is a median.
Find the length of \(AB\) in terms of \(a,b,\) and \(c\).
16.3: Any Triangle’s Medians
The goal is to prove that the medians of any triangle intersect at a point. Suppose the vertices of a triangle are \((0,0), (w,0),\) and \((a,b)\).
- Each student in the group should choose 1 side of the triangle. If your group has 4 people, 2 can work together. Write an expression for the midpoint of the side you chose.
- Each student in the group should choose a median. Write an expression for the point that partitions each median in a \(2:1\) ratio from the vertex to the midpoint of the opposite side.
- Compare the coordinates of the point you found to those of your groupmates. What do you notice?
- Explain how these steps prove that the 3 medians of any triangle intersect at a single point.
Summary
Here is a triangle with its medians drawn in. A median is a line segment drawn from a vertex of a triangle to the midpoint of the opposite side. Triangles have 3 medians, with 1 for each vertex.
Notice that the medians intersect at 1 point. This point is always \(\frac23\) of the distance from a vertex to the opposite midpoint. Another way to say this is that the point of intersection, \(V\), partitions segments \(AJ,BL,\) and \(CK\) so that the ratios \(AV:VJ,BV:VL,\) and \(CV:VK\) are all \(2:1\).
We can prove this by working with a general triangle that can represent any triangle. Since any triangle can be transformed so that 1 vertex is on the origin and 1 side lies on the \(x\)-axis, we can say that our general triangle has vertices \((0,0), (w,0)\), and \((a,b)\). Through careful calculation, we can show that all 3 medians go through the point \(\left(\frac{a+w}{3},\frac{b}{3}\right)\). Therefore, the medians intersect at this point, which partitions each median in a \(2:1\) ratio from the vertex to the opposite side’s midpoint.
Glossary Entries
- median (geometry)
A line from a vertex of a triangle to the midpoint of the opposite side. Each dashed line in the image is a median.
- opposite
Two numbers are opposites of each other if they are the same distance from 0 on the number line, but on opposite sides.
The opposite of 3 is -3 and the opposite of -5 is 5.
- point-slope form
The form of an equation for a line with slope \(m\) through the point \((h,k)\). Point-slope form is usually written as \(y-k = m(x-h)\). It can also be written as \(y = k + m(x-h)\).
- reciprocal
If \(p\) is a rational number that is not zero, then the reciprocal of \(p\) is the number \(\frac{1}{p}\).