Centers of a Triangle - Orthocenter
by Emily Kennedy


The orthocenter is defined as the point at which the three altitudes of a triangle meet. Let's prove that the three altitudes of any triangle really do meet in a single point.

First, let's find equations for the altitudes of a triangle.

is perpendicular to , so their slopes must be negative reciprocals.
is horizontal, so is a vertical line.
And goes through the point (2b, 2c), so is the line described by
x = 2b.


is perpendicular to , so their slopes must be negative reciprocals.
If is not vertical (i.e., if 2b ≠ 0), its slope is
so the slope of is
goes through the point (2a,0), so is the line described by

If is vertical (i.e., if 2b = 0), then the slope of is 0.
goes through the point (2a,0), so is the line described by
.

So, whether is vertical or not, is the line described by


is perpendicular to , so their slopes must be negative reciprocals.
If is not vertical (i.e., if 2b ≠ 2a), its slope is
so the slope of is
goes through the point (0,0), so is the line described by

or, more simply,

If is vertical (i.e., if 2b = 2a), then the slope of is 0.
goes through the point (0,0), so is the line described by
.

So, whether is vertical or not, is the line described by


Let's find the point at which and intersect, and then we can determine whether lies on as well. If it does, we will have shown that all three altitudes intersect in a single point.


We need to find a point that is on both and

The y-coordinate of both lines must be the same at x = .

So we must have:

And


Does our point lie on ? Let's find out.

The x-coordinate of any point on is 2b.

= 2b, so does indeed lie on .


So for any triangle, all three altitudes intersect at a single point, the orthocenter.

For a triangle whose vertices are (0,0), (2a,0), and (2b,2c), the coordinates of the orthocenter are

Click here to continue.


<< Previous (Centroid)     Next (Circumcenter) >>

Return to my page
Return to EMAT 6680 page