The relationships between a triangle made up of the medians of another triangle.


Triangles can be constructed in many shapes and sizes. A specific example is one that is a triangle constructed from the medians of another triangle. The black triangle below has its medians drawn in colors. The red, green and blue triangle is the triangle constructed from the red, green and blue medians respectively.

All of the triangles in this write up were constructed using Geometer SketchPad 3.0 (GSP). Triangle is a GSP document that can be used to explore the relationship between a triangle and the triangle made up of its medians.

There is a relationship between an equilateral triangle and its triangle made up of medians. Both triangles are equilaterals, as seen below. Here is a GSP document that can be used to explore the relationship between an equilateral triangle and the triangle made up of its medians.

The ratio between the length of the side of the original triangle and the median is a constant, with a value of 0.866 as measured by GSP. The value of this ratio can be found algebraically using the pythagorean theroem. If we look at the right triangle below, the black side is an original side of the equilateral triangle. The green side is a median of the original triangle, while the aqua side is one half of an original side. Using the pythagorean theorem, we can calculate the length of the green side to be times the length of the original side.

What happens when we have a right triangle, will the resulting triangle made up of its medians always be a right triangle as well? By looking at many different pairs of triangles, it is obvious that the resulting triangle does not have to be a right triangle. There is one case when resulting triangle is a right triangle and it is shown below. Here is a GSP document that can be used to explore the relationship between a right triangle and the triangle made up of its medians.


A third set of triangles that can be examined are the isosceles triangle and the triangle made up of its medians. Using the measurement functions of GSP, it can be determined that the resulting triangle is also an isosceles triangle.


Here is a GSP document that can be used to explore the relationship between an isosceles triangle and the triangle made up of its medians. During the animation of A, the vertex on the original triangle where the green median is located, it appears that the resulting triangle is not an isosceles triangle. The ratio between the red and blue sides is only 0.99 instead of 1.00 at times within the animation. The same ratio can not be found when point A is manually moved. This leads me to believe that there is a bug within GSP.


A GSP script to create the medians of a given triangle.

A GSP script to create a triangle from the medians of another triangle.

To go to a library of GSP scripts, click here.

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