Area of A Parallelogram Notes
Area of A Parallelogram Notes
The total space inside the boundary of the parallelogram is called as the area of the
parallelogram. The area of a parallelogram is twice the area of a triangle created by one of its
diagonals.
In a parallelogram, the opposite sides are equal to each other and the opposite angles are also
equal to each other. The sum of all the interior angles of a parallelogram is 3600.
Area of a parallelogram, A = bh
where,
The base and the height of the parallelogram are always perpendicular to each other.
We can derive the height of the parallelogram with the help of the area of a parallelogram
formula.
Area = ab sin θ.
Let us find the area of a parallelogram whose vertices are (0, 0), (3, 7), (4, -2) and (7, 8).
Let parallelogram ABCD has vertices: A(0, 0), B(3, 7), C(4, -2) and D(7, 8).
a ⃗ = AB = (3 - 0, 7 - 0) = (3, 7)
= |-6 - 28|
= 34
A=bh
34 = b (8)
b = 348
b = 4.25 m
Question 4: What is the parallelogram height if the area of the parallelogram is 400 cm2 and base
of the parallelogram is 20 cm?
Solution:
Given, Area of the parallelogram is 400 cm2 and base of the parallelogram = 20 cm.
= 40020
= 20 cm.
Parallelogram Theorem
Quadrilateral means a closed figure formed by four line segments and a parallelogram is a quadrilateral
in which the opposite sides are parallel to each other. A point is used to represent a position in space. A
plane means a surface increasing infinitely in every directions such that all points lying on the line joining
any two points on the surface. The parallelogram theorems are given below.
Parallelogram Proof
Below you could see three theorems of parallelogram
Theorem 1:
Parallelograms are the same base and between the same parallel lines are equal in area.
Activity:
Draw a line segment AB. Draw a line l parallel to AB. Mark a point C on l. Draw AL
perpendicular to l. Measure the length of AL.
= 1/2 * AB * AL
Mark another point P on l. We find the area of ?ABP as 1/2 × base × height = 1/2 * Base *
Height
= 1/2 * AB * AL
thus, we seen that the area of the triangle remains the same for all positions of the vertex C on
the line l.
Theorem 2:
Construction: Draw the diagonals AC and BD. Let M represent the point of intersection of AC
and BD (see Figure).
(ii) AM = MC
(iii) BM is common.
In particular, AB = BC.
? AB = BC = CD = AD.
Theorem 3:
The quadrilateral is a parallelogram, then the one pair of opposite sides are parallel and equal.
Given: ABCD is a quadrilateral, where AB || CD and AB = CD.
(i) AB = CD (given)
(ii) AC is common
AD || BC.
Theorem:
The diagonals of a parallelogram bisect each other.
Proof:
Eucledian Proof
According to scientist Adler, in his book on modern geometry he mention “One of the main
defects in traditional Euclidean proof is its almost complete disregard of such notions as the two
sides of a line and the interior of an angle. Without clarification of these ideas, absurd
consequences result.”
Let PQRS parallelogram where, PQ||RS and QR||PS and O be the intersection of the diagonals
To prove :
As we assumed the trivial fact that point S and Q are either sides of the line PR .
Draw back lies in harder situation to prove the last point.