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Centroid

In mathematics and physics, the centroid, also known as geometric center or center of figure, of a plane figure or solid figure is the arithmetic mean position of all the points in the surface of the figure.[further explanation needed] The same definition extends to any object in n-dimensional Euclidean space.[1]

Centroid of a triangle

In geometry, one often assumes uniform mass density, in which case the barycenter or center of mass coincides with the centroid. Informally, it can be understood as the point at which a cutout of the shape (with uniformly distributed mass) could be perfectly balanced on the tip of a pin.[2]

In physics, if variations in gravity are considered, then a center of gravity can be defined as the weighted mean of all points weighted by their specific weight.

In geography, the centroid of a radial projection of a region of the Earth's surface to sea level is the region's geographical center.

History

The term "centroid" is of recent coinage (1814).[citation needed] It is used as a substitute for the older terms "center of gravity" and "center of mass" when the purely geometrical aspects of that point are to be emphasized. The term is peculiar to the English language; the French, for instance, use "centre de gravité" on most occasions, and others use terms of similar meaning.

The center of gravity, as the name indicates, is a notion that arose in mechanics, most likely in connection with building activities. It is uncertain when the idea first appeared, as the concept likely occurred to many people individually with minor differences. Nonetheless, the center of gravity of figures was studied extensively in Antiquity; Bossut credits Archimedes (287–212 BCE) with being the first to find the centroid of plane figures, although he never defines it.[3] A treatment of centroids of solids by Archimedes have been lost.[4]

It is unlikely that Archimedes learned the theorem that the medians of a triangle meet in a point—the center of gravity of the triangle—directly from Euclid, as this proposition is not in the Elements. The first explicit statement of this proposition is due to Heron of Alexandria (perhaps the first century CE) and occurs in his Mechanics. It may be added, in passing, that the proposition did not become common in the textbooks on plane geometry until the nineteenth century.

Properties

The geometric centroid of a convex object always lies in the object. A non-convex object might have a centroid that is outside the figure itself. The centroid of a ring or a bowl, for example, lies in the object's central void.

If the centroid is defined, it is a fixed point of all isometries in its symmetry group. In particular, the geometric centroid of an object lies in the intersection of all its hyperplanes of symmetry. The centroid of many figures (regular polygon, regular polyhedron, cylinder, rectangle, rhombus, circle, sphere, ellipse, ellipsoid, superellipse, superellipsoid, etc.) can be determined by this principle alone.

In particular, the centroid of a parallelogram is the meeting point of its two diagonals. This is not true of other quadrilaterals.

For the same reason, the centroid of an object with translational symmetry is undefined (or lies outside the enclosing space), because a translation has no fixed point.

Examples

The centroid of a triangle is the intersection of the three medians of the triangle (each median connecting a vertex with the midpoint of the opposite side).[5]

For other properties of a triangle's centroid, see below.

Locating

Plumb line method

The centroid of a uniformly dense planar lamina, such as in figure (a) below, may be determined experimentally by using a plumbline and a pin to find the collocated center of mass of a thin body of uniform density having the same shape. The body is held by the pin, inserted at a point, off the presumed centroid in such a way that it can freely rotate around the pin; the plumb line is then dropped from the pin (figure b). The position of the plumbline is traced on the surface, and the procedure is repeated with the pin inserted at any different point (or a number of points) off the centroid of the object. The unique intersection point of these lines will be the centroid (figure c). Provided that the body is of uniform density, all lines made this way will include the centroid, and all lines will cross at exactly the same place.

 
 
 
(a) (b) (c)

This method can be extended (in theory) to concave shapes where the centroid may lie outside the shape, and virtually to solids (again, of uniform density), where the centroid may lie within the body. The (virtual) positions of the plumb lines need to be recorded by means other than by drawing them along the shape.

Balancing method

For convex two-dimensional shapes, the centroid can be found by balancing the shape on a smaller shape, such as the top of a narrow cylinder. The centroid occurs somewhere within the range of contact between the two shapes (and exactly at the point where the shape would balance on a pin). In principle, progressively narrower cylinders can be used to find the centroid to arbitrary precision. In practice air currents make this infeasible. However, by marking the overlap range from multiple balances, one can achieve a considerable level of accuracy.

Of a finite set of points

The centroid of a finite set of   points   in   is[1]

 
This point minimizes the sum of squared Euclidean distances between itself and each point in the set.

By geometric decomposition

The centroid of a plane figure   can be computed by dividing it into a finite number of simpler figures  , computing the centroid   and area   of each part, and then computing

 

Holes in the figure  , overlaps between the parts, or parts that extend outside the figure can all be handled using negative areas  . Namely, the measures   should be taken with positive and negative signs in such a way that the sum of the signs of   for all parts that enclose a given point   is 1 if   belongs to  , and 0 otherwise.

For example, the figure below (a) is easily divided into a square and a triangle, both with positive area; and a circular hole, with negative area (b).

 
(a) 2D Object
 
(b) Object described using simpler elements
 
(c) Centroids of elements of the object

The centroid of each part can be found in any list of centroids of simple shapes (c). Then the centroid of the figure is the weighted average of the three points. The horizontal position of the centroid, from the left edge of the figure is

 
The vertical position of the centroid is found in the same way.

The same formula holds for any three-dimensional objects, except that each   should be the volume of  , rather than its area. It also holds for any subset of  , for any dimension  , with the areas replaced by the  -dimensional measures of the parts.

By integral formula

The centroid of a subset X of   can also be computed by the integral

 
where the integrals are taken over the whole space  , and g is the characteristic function of the subset, which is 1 inside X and 0 outside it.[6] Note that the denominator is simply the measure of the set X. This formula cannot be applied if the set X has zero measure, or if either integral diverges.

Another formula for the centroid is

 
where Ck is the kth coordinate of C, and Sk(z) is the measure of the intersection of X with the hyperplane defined by the equation xk = z. Again, the denominator is simply the measure of X.

For a plane figure, in particular, the barycenter coordinates are

 
 

where A is the area of the figure X; Sy(x) is the length of the intersection of X with the vertical line at abscissa x; and Sx(y) is the analogous quantity for the swapped axes.

Of a bounded region

The centroid   of a region bounded by the graphs of the continuous functions   and   such that   on the interval  ,  , is given by[6][7]

 
 

where   is the area of the region (given by  ).[8][9]

With an integraph

An integraph (a relative of the planimeter) can be used to find the centroid of an object of irregular shape with smooth (or piecewise smooth) boundary. The mathematical principle involved is a special case of Green's theorem.[10]

Of an L-shaped object

This is a method of determining the centroid of an L-shaped object.

 

  1. Divide the shape into two rectangles, as shown in fig 2. Find the centroids of these two rectangles by drawing the diagonals. Draw a line joining the centroids. The centroid of the shape must lie on this line AB.
  2. Divide the shape into two other rectangles, as shown in fig 3. Find the centroids of these two rectangles by drawing the diagonals. Draw a line joining the centroids. The centroid of the L-shape must lie on this line CD.
  3. As the centroid of the shape must lie along AB and also along CD, it must be at the intersection of these two lines, at O. The point O might lie inside or outside the L-shaped object.

Of a triangle

   

The centroid of a triangle is the point of intersection of its medians (the lines joining each vertex with the midpoint of the opposite side).[5] The centroid divides each of the medians in the ratio 2:1, which is to say it is located ⅓ of the distance from each side to the opposite vertex (see figures at right).[11][12] Its Cartesian coordinates are the means of the coordinates of the three vertices. That is, if the three vertices are     and   then the centroid (denoted C here but most commonly denoted G in triangle geometry) is

 

The centroid is therefore at   in barycentric coordinates.

In trilinear coordinates the centroid can be expressed in any of these equivalent ways in terms of the side lengths a, b, c and vertex angles L, M, N:[13]

 

The centroid is also the physical center of mass if the triangle is made from a uniform sheet of material; or if all the mass is concentrated at the three vertices, and evenly divided among them. On the other hand, if the mass is distributed along the triangle's perimeter, with uniform linear density, then the center of mass lies at the Spieker center (the incenter of the medial triangle), which does not (in general) coincide with the geometric centroid of the full triangle.

The area of the triangle is 1.5 times the length of any side times the perpendicular distance from the side to the centroid.[14]

A triangle's centroid lies on its Euler line between its orthocenter H and its circumcenter O, exactly twice as close to the latter as to the former:[15][16]

 

In addition, for the incenter I and nine-point center N, we have

 

If G is the centroid of the triangle ABC, then:

 
The isogonal conjugate of a triangle's centroid is its symmedian point.

Any of the three medians through the centroid divides the triangle's area in half. This is not true for other lines through the centroid; the greatest departure from the equal-area division occurs when a line through the centroid is parallel to a side of the triangle, creating a smaller triangle and a trapezoid; in this case the trapezoid's area is 5/9 that of the original triangle.[17]

Let P be any point in the plane of a triangle with vertices A, B, and C and centroid G. Then the sum of the squared distances of P from the three vertices exceeds the sum of the squared distances of the centroid G from the vertices by three times the squared distance between P and G:[18]

 

The sum of the squares of the triangle's sides equals three times the sum of the squared distances of the centroid from the vertices:[18]

 

A triangle's centroid is the point that maximizes the product of the directed distances of a point from the triangle's sidelines.[19]

Let ABC be a triangle, let G be its centroid, and let D, E, and F be the midpoints of BC, CA, and AB, respectively. For any point P in the plane of ABC then[20]

 

Of a polygon

The centroid of a non-self-intersecting closed polygon defined by n vertices (x0,y0), (x1,y1), ..., (xn−1,yn−1) is the point (Cx, Cy),[21] where

 
and
 
and where A is the polygon's signed area,[21] as described by the shoelace formula:
 

In these formulae, the vertices are assumed to be numbered in order of their occurrence along the polygon's perimeter; furthermore, the vertex ( xn, yn ) is assumed to be the same as (x0, y0), meaning   on the last case must loop around to  . (If the points are numbered in clockwise order, the area A, computed as above, will be negative; however, the centroid coordinates will be correct even in this case.)

Of a cone or pyramid

The centroid of a cone or pyramid is located on the line segment that connects the apex to the centroid of the base. For a solid cone or pyramid, the centroid is 1/4 the distance from the base to the apex. For a cone or pyramid that is just a shell (hollow) with no base, the centroid is 1/3 the distance from the base plane to the apex.

Of a tetrahedron and n-dimensional simplex

A tetrahedron is an object in three-dimensional space having four triangles as its faces. A line segment joining a vertex of a tetrahedron with the centroid of the opposite face is called a median, and a line segment joining the midpoints of two opposite edges is called a bimedian. Hence there are four medians and three bimedians. These seven line segments all meet at the centroid of the tetrahedron.[22] The medians are divided by the centroid in the ratio 3:1. The centroid of a tetrahedron is the midpoint between its Monge point and circumcenter (center of the circumscribed sphere). These three points define the Euler line of the tetrahedron that is analogous to the Euler line of a triangle.

These results generalize to any n-dimensional simplex in the following way. If the set of vertices of a simplex is  , then considering the vertices as vectors, the centroid is

 

The geometric centroid coincides with the center of mass if the mass is uniformly distributed over the whole simplex, or concentrated at the vertices as n+1 equal masses.

Of a hemisphere

The centroid of a solid hemisphere (i.e. half of a solid ball) divides the line segment connecting the sphere's center to the hemisphere's pole in the ratio 3:5 (i.e. it lies 3/8 of the way from the center to the pole). The centroid of a hollow hemisphere (i.e. half of a hollow sphere) divides the line segment connecting the sphere's center to the hemisphere's pole in half.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Protter & Morrey (1970, p. 520)
  2. ^ Protter & Morrey (1970, p. 521)
  3. ^ Court, Nathan Altshiller (1960). "Notes on the centroid". The Mathematics Teacher. 53 (1): 33–35. doi:10.5951/MT.53.1.0033. JSTOR 27956057.
  4. ^ Knorr, W. (1978). "Archimedes' lost treatise on the centers of gravity of solids". The Mathematical Intelligencer. 1 (2): 102–109. doi:10.1007/BF03023072. ISSN 0343-6993.
  5. ^ a b Altshiller-Court (1925, p. 66)
  6. ^ a b Protter & Morrey (1970, p. 526)
  7. ^ Protter & Morrey (1970, p. 527)
  8. ^ Protter & Morrey (1970, p. 528)
  9. ^ Larson (1998, pp. 458–460)
  10. ^ Sangwin
  11. ^ Altshiller-Court (1925, p. 65)
  12. ^ Kay (1969, p. 184)
  13. ^ Clark Kimberling's Encyclopedia of Triangles . Archived from the original on 2012-04-19. Retrieved 2012-06-02.
  14. ^ Johnson (2007, p. 173)
  15. ^ Altshiller-Court (1925, p. 101)
  16. ^ Kay (1969, pp. 18, 189, 225–226)
  17. ^ Bottomley, Henry. "Medians and Area Bisectors of a Triangle". Retrieved 27 September 2013.
  18. ^ a b Altshiller-Court (1925, pp. 70–71)
  19. ^ Kimberling, Clark (201). "Trilinear distance inequalities for the symmedian point, the centroid, and other triangle centers". Forum Geometricorum. 10: 135–139.
  20. ^ Gerald A. Edgar, Daniel H. Ullman & Douglas B. West (2018) Problems and Solutions, The American Mathematical Monthly, 125:1, 81-89, DOI: 10.1080/00029890.2018.1397465
  21. ^ a b Bourke (1997)
  22. ^ Leung, Kam-tim; and Suen, Suk-nam; "Vectors, matrices and geometry", Hong Kong University Press, 1994, pp. 53–54

References

  • Altshiller-Court, Nathan (1925), College Geometry: An Introduction to the Modern Geometry of the Triangle and the Circle (2nd ed.), New York: Barnes & Noble, LCCN 52013504
  • Bourke, Paul (July 1997). "Calculating the area and centroid of a polygon".
  • Johnson, Roger A. (2007), Advanced Euclidean Geometry, Dover
  • Kay, David C. (1969), College Geometry, New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, LCCN 69012075
  • Larson, Roland E.; Hostetler, Robert P.; Edwards, Bruce H. (1998), Calculus of a Single Variable (6th ed.), Houghton Mifflin Company
  • Protter, Murray H.; Morrey, Charles B. Jr. (1970), College Calculus with Analytic Geometry (2nd ed.), Reading: Addison-Wesley, LCCN 76087042
  • Sangwin, C.J., (PDF), archived from the original (PDF) on November 13, 2013

External links

  • Weisstein, Eric W. "Geometric Centroid". MathWorld.
  • Encyclopedia of Triangle Centers by Clark Kimberling. The centroid is indexed as X(2).
  • Characteristic Property of Centroid at cut-the-knot
  • Interactive animations showing Centroid of a triangle and Centroid construction with compass and straightedge
  • Experimentally finding the medians and centroid of a triangle at Dynamic Geometry Sketches, an interactive dynamic geometry sketch using the gravity simulator of Cinderella.

centroid, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, april, 2013, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, mathemati. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message In mathematics and physics the centroid also known as geometric center or center of figure of a plane figure or solid figure is the arithmetic mean position of all the points in the surface of the figure further explanation needed The same definition extends to any object in n dimensional Euclidean space 1 Centroid of a triangle In geometry one often assumes uniform mass density in which case the barycenter or center of mass coincides with the centroid Informally it can be understood as the point at which a cutout of the shape with uniformly distributed mass could be perfectly balanced on the tip of a pin 2 In physics if variations in gravity are considered then a center of gravity can be defined as the weighted mean of all points weighted by their specific weight In geography the centroid of a radial projection of a region of the Earth s surface to sea level is the region s geographical center Contents 1 History 2 Properties 3 Examples 4 Locating 4 1 Plumb line method 4 2 Balancing method 4 3 Of a finite set of points 4 4 By geometric decomposition 4 5 By integral formula 4 6 Of a bounded region 4 7 With an integraph 4 8 Of an L shaped object 4 9 Of a triangle 4 10 Of a polygon 4 11 Of a cone or pyramid 4 12 Of a tetrahedron and n dimensional simplex 4 13 Of a hemisphere 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditThe term centroid is of recent coinage 1814 citation needed It is used as a substitute for the older terms center of gravity and center of mass when the purely geometrical aspects of that point are to be emphasized The term is peculiar to the English language the French for instance use centre de gravite on most occasions and others use terms of similar meaning The center of gravity as the name indicates is a notion that arose in mechanics most likely in connection with building activities It is uncertain when the idea first appeared as the concept likely occurred to many people individually with minor differences Nonetheless the center of gravity of figures was studied extensively in Antiquity Bossut credits Archimedes 287 212 BCE with being the first to find the centroid of plane figures although he never defines it 3 A treatment of centroids of solids by Archimedes have been lost 4 It is unlikely that Archimedes learned the theorem that the medians of a triangle meet in a point the center of gravity of the triangle directly from Euclid as this proposition is not in the Elements The first explicit statement of this proposition is due to Heron of Alexandria perhaps the first century CE and occurs in his Mechanics It may be added in passing that the proposition did not become common in the textbooks on plane geometry until the nineteenth century Properties EditThe geometric centroid of a convex object always lies in the object A non convex object might have a centroid that is outside the figure itself The centroid of a ring or a bowl for example lies in the object s central void If the centroid is defined it is a fixed point of all isometries in its symmetry group In particular the geometric centroid of an object lies in the intersection of all its hyperplanes of symmetry The centroid of many figures regular polygon regular polyhedron cylinder rectangle rhombus circle sphere ellipse ellipsoid superellipse superellipsoid etc can be determined by this principle alone In particular the centroid of a parallelogram is the meeting point of its two diagonals This is not true of other quadrilaterals For the same reason the centroid of an object with translational symmetry is undefined or lies outside the enclosing space because a translation has no fixed point Examples EditThe centroid of a triangle is the intersection of the three medians of the triangle each median connecting a vertex with the midpoint of the opposite side 5 For other properties of a triangle s centroid see below Locating EditPlumb line method Edit The centroid of a uniformly dense planar lamina such as in figure a below may be determined experimentally by using a plumbline and a pin to find the collocated center of mass of a thin body of uniform density having the same shape The body is held by the pin inserted at a point off the presumed centroid in such a way that it can freely rotate around the pin the plumb line is then dropped from the pin figure b The position of the plumbline is traced on the surface and the procedure is repeated with the pin inserted at any different point or a number of points off the centroid of the object The unique intersection point of these lines will be the centroid figure c Provided that the body is of uniform density all lines made this way will include the centroid and all lines will cross at exactly the same place a b c This method can be extended in theory to concave shapes where the centroid may lie outside the shape and virtually to solids again of uniform density where the centroid may lie within the body The virtual positions of the plumb lines need to be recorded by means other than by drawing them along the shape Balancing method Edit For convex two dimensional shapes the centroid can be found by balancing the shape on a smaller shape such as the top of a narrow cylinder The centroid occurs somewhere within the range of contact between the two shapes and exactly at the point where the shape would balance on a pin In principle progressively narrower cylinders can be used to find the centroid to arbitrary precision In practice air currents make this infeasible However by marking the overlap range from multiple balances one can achieve a considerable level of accuracy Of a finite set of points Edit The centroid of a finite set of k displaystyle k points x 1 x 2 x k displaystyle mathbf x 1 mathbf x 2 ldots mathbf x k in R n displaystyle mathbb R n is 1 C x 1 x 2 x k k displaystyle mathbf C frac mathbf x 1 mathbf x 2 cdots mathbf x k k This point minimizes the sum of squared Euclidean distances between itself and each point in the set By geometric decomposition Edit The centroid of a plane figure X displaystyle X can be computed by dividing it into a finite number of simpler figures X 1 X 2 X n displaystyle X 1 X 2 dots X n computing the centroid C i displaystyle C i and area A i displaystyle A i of each part and then computingC x i C i x A i i A i C y i C i y A i i A i displaystyle C x frac sum i C i x A i sum i A i C y frac sum i C i y A i sum i A i Holes in the figure X displaystyle X overlaps between the parts or parts that extend outside the figure can all be handled using negative areas A i displaystyle A i Namely the measures A i displaystyle A i should be taken with positive and negative signs in such a way that the sum of the signs of A i displaystyle A i for all parts that enclose a given point p displaystyle p is 1 if p displaystyle p belongs to X displaystyle X and 0 otherwise For example the figure below a is easily divided into a square and a triangle both with positive area and a circular hole with negative area b a 2D Object b Object described using simpler elements c Centroids of elements of the object The centroid of each part can be found in any list of centroids of simple shapes c Then the centroid of the figure is the weighted average of the three points The horizontal position of the centroid from the left edge of the figure isx 5 10 2 13 33 1 2 10 2 3 p 2 5 2 10 2 1 2 10 2 p 2 5 2 8 5 units displaystyle x frac 5 times 10 2 13 33 times frac 1 2 10 2 3 times pi 2 5 2 10 2 frac 1 2 10 2 pi 2 5 2 approx 8 5 text units The vertical position of the centroid is found in the same way The same formula holds for any three dimensional objects except that each A i displaystyle A i should be the volume of X i displaystyle X i rather than its area It also holds for any subset of R d displaystyle mathbb R d for any dimension d displaystyle d with the areas replaced by the d displaystyle d dimensional measures of the parts By integral formula Edit The centroid of a subset X of R n displaystyle mathbb R n can also be computed by the integralC x g x d x g x d x displaystyle C frac int xg x dx int g x dx where the integrals are taken over the whole space R n displaystyle mathbb R n and g is the characteristic function of the subset which is 1 inside X and 0 outside it 6 Note that the denominator is simply the measure of the set X This formula cannot be applied if the set X has zero measure or if either integral diverges Another formula for the centroid isC k z S k z d z g x d x displaystyle C k frac int zS k z dz int g x dx where Ck is the kth coordinate of C and Sk z is the measure of the intersection of X with the hyperplane defined by the equation xk z Again the denominator is simply the measure of X For a plane figure in particular the barycenter coordinates areC x x S y x d x A displaystyle C mathrm x frac int xS mathrm y x dx A C y y S x y d y A displaystyle C mathrm y frac int yS mathrm x y dy A where A is the area of the figure X Sy x is the length of the intersection of X with the vertical line at abscissa x and Sx y is the analogous quantity for the swapped axes Of a bounded region Edit The centroid x y displaystyle bar x bar y of a region bounded by the graphs of the continuous functions f displaystyle f and g displaystyle g such that f x g x displaystyle f x geq g x on the interval a b displaystyle a b a x b displaystyle a leq x leq b is given by 6 7 x 1 A a b x f x g x d x displaystyle bar x frac 1 A int a b x f x g x dx y 1 A a b f x g x 2 f x g x d x displaystyle bar y frac 1 A int a b left frac f x g x 2 right f x g x dx where A displaystyle A is the area of the region given by a b f x g x d x textstyle int a b left f x g x right dx 8 9 With an integraph Edit An integraph a relative of the planimeter can be used to find the centroid of an object of irregular shape with smooth or piecewise smooth boundary The mathematical principle involved is a special case of Green s theorem 10 Of an L shaped object Edit This is a method of determining the centroid of an L shaped object Divide the shape into two rectangles as shown in fig 2 Find the centroids of these two rectangles by drawing the diagonals Draw a line joining the centroids The centroid of the shape must lie on this line AB Divide the shape into two other rectangles as shown in fig 3 Find the centroids of these two rectangles by drawing the diagonals Draw a line joining the centroids The centroid of the L shape must lie on this line CD As the centroid of the shape must lie along AB and also along CD it must be at the intersection of these two lines at O The point O might lie inside or outside the L shaped object Of a triangle Edit The centroid of a triangle is the point of intersection of its medians the lines joining each vertex with the midpoint of the opposite side 5 The centroid divides each of the medians in the ratio 2 1 which is to say it is located of the distance from each side to the opposite vertex see figures at right 11 12 Its Cartesian coordinates are the means of the coordinates of the three vertices That is if the three vertices are L x L y L displaystyle L x L y L M x M y M displaystyle M x M y M and N x N y N displaystyle N x N y N then the centroid denoted C here but most commonly denoted G in triangle geometry isC 1 3 L M N 1 3 x L x M x N 1 3 y L y M y N displaystyle C frac 1 3 L M N left frac 1 3 x L x M x N frac 1 3 y L y M y N right The centroid is therefore at 1 3 1 3 1 3 displaystyle tfrac 1 3 tfrac 1 3 tfrac 1 3 in barycentric coordinates In trilinear coordinates the centroid can be expressed in any of these equivalent ways in terms of the side lengths a b c and vertex angles L M N 13 C 1 a 1 b 1 c b c c a a b csc L csc M csc N cos L cos M cos N cos M cos N cos L cos N cos L cos M sec L sec M sec N sec M sec N sec L sec N sec L sec M displaystyle begin aligned C amp frac 1 a frac 1 b frac 1 c bc ca ab csc L csc M csc N 6pt amp cos L cos M cdot cos N cos M cos N cdot cos L cos N cos L cdot cos M 6pt amp sec L sec M cdot sec N sec M sec N cdot sec L sec N sec L cdot sec M end aligned The centroid is also the physical center of mass if the triangle is made from a uniform sheet of material or if all the mass is concentrated at the three vertices and evenly divided among them On the other hand if the mass is distributed along the triangle s perimeter with uniform linear density then the center of mass lies at the Spieker center the incenter of the medial triangle which does not in general coincide with the geometric centroid of the full triangle The area of the triangle is 1 5 times the length of any side times the perpendicular distance from the side to the centroid 14 A triangle s centroid lies on its Euler line between its orthocenter H and its circumcenter O exactly twice as close to the latter as to the former 15 16 C H 2 C O displaystyle overline CH 2 overline CO In addition for the incenter I and nine point center N we haveC H 4 C N C O 2 C N I C lt H C I H lt H C I C lt I O displaystyle begin aligned overline CH amp 4 overline CN 5pt overline CO amp 2 overline CN 5pt overline IC amp lt overline HC 5pt overline IH amp lt overline HC 5pt overline IC amp lt overline IO end aligned If G is the centroid of the triangle ABC then Area of A B G Area of A C G Area of B C G 1 3 Area of A B C displaystyle text Area of triangle mathrm ABG text Area of triangle mathrm ACG text Area of triangle mathrm BCG frac 1 3 text Area of triangle mathrm ABC The isogonal conjugate of a triangle s centroid is its symmedian point Any of the three medians through the centroid divides the triangle s area in half This is not true for other lines through the centroid the greatest departure from the equal area division occurs when a line through the centroid is parallel to a side of the triangle creating a smaller triangle and a trapezoid in this case the trapezoid s area is 5 9 that of the original triangle 17 Let P be any point in the plane of a triangle with vertices A B and C and centroid G Then the sum of the squared distances of P from the three vertices exceeds the sum of the squared distances of the centroid G from the vertices by three times the squared distance between P and G 18 P A 2 P B 2 P C 2 G A 2 G B 2 G C 2 3 P G 2 displaystyle PA 2 PB 2 PC 2 GA 2 GB 2 GC 2 3PG 2 The sum of the squares of the triangle s sides equals three times the sum of the squared distances of the centroid from the vertices 18 A B 2 B C 2 C A 2 3 G A 2 G B 2 G C 2 displaystyle AB 2 BC 2 CA 2 3 GA 2 GB 2 GC 2 A triangle s centroid is the point that maximizes the product of the directed distances of a point from the triangle s sidelines 19 Let ABC be a triangle let G be its centroid and let D E and F be the midpoints of BC CA and AB respectively For any point P in the plane of ABC then 20 P A P B P C 2 P D P E P F 3 P G displaystyle PA PB PC leq 2 PD PE PF 3PG Of a polygon Edit The centroid of a non self intersecting closed polygon defined by n vertices x0 y0 x1 y1 xn 1 yn 1 is the point Cx Cy 21 whereC x 1 6 A i 0 n 1 x i x i 1 x i y i 1 x i 1 y i displaystyle C mathrm x frac 1 6A sum i 0 n 1 x i x i 1 x i y i 1 x i 1 y i and C y 1 6 A i 0 n 1 y i y i 1 x i y i 1 x i 1 y i displaystyle C mathrm y frac 1 6A sum i 0 n 1 y i y i 1 x i y i 1 x i 1 y i and where A is the polygon s signed area 21 as described by the shoelace formula A 1 2 i 0 n 1 x i y i 1 x i 1 y i displaystyle A frac 1 2 sum i 0 n 1 x i y i 1 x i 1 y i In these formulae the vertices are assumed to be numbered in order of their occurrence along the polygon s perimeter furthermore the vertex xn yn is assumed to be the same as x0 y0 meaning i 1 displaystyle i 1 on the last case must loop around to i 0 displaystyle i 0 If the points are numbered in clockwise order the area A computed as above will be negative however the centroid coordinates will be correct even in this case Of a cone or pyramid Edit The centroid of a cone or pyramid is located on the line segment that connects the apex to the centroid of the base For a solid cone or pyramid the centroid is 1 4 the distance from the base to the apex For a cone or pyramid that is just a shell hollow with no base the centroid is 1 3 the distance from the base plane to the apex Of a tetrahedron and n dimensional simplex Edit A tetrahedron is an object in three dimensional space having four triangles as its faces A line segment joining a vertex of a tetrahedron with the centroid of the opposite face is called a median and a line segment joining the midpoints of two opposite edges is called a bimedian Hence there are four medians and three bimedians These seven line segments all meet at the centroid of the tetrahedron 22 The medians are divided by the centroid in the ratio 3 1 The centroid of a tetrahedron is the midpoint between its Monge point and circumcenter center of the circumscribed sphere These three points define the Euler line of the tetrahedron that is analogous to the Euler line of a triangle These results generalize to any n dimensional simplex in the following way If the set of vertices of a simplex is v 0 v n displaystyle v 0 ldots v n then considering the vertices as vectors the centroid isC 1 n 1 i 0 n v i displaystyle C frac 1 n 1 sum i 0 n v i The geometric centroid coincides with the center of mass if the mass is uniformly distributed over the whole simplex or concentrated at the vertices as n 1 equal masses Of a hemisphere Edit The centroid of a solid hemisphere i e half of a solid ball divides the line segment connecting the sphere s center to the hemisphere s pole in the ratio 3 5 i e it lies 3 8 of the way from the center to the pole The centroid of a hollow hemisphere i e half of a hollow sphere divides the line segment connecting the sphere s center to the hemisphere s pole in half See also EditChebyshev center Circular mean Frechet mean k means algorithm List of centroids Medoid Pappus s centroid theorem Spectral centroid Triangle centerNotes Edit a b Protter amp Morrey 1970 p 520 Protter amp Morrey 1970 p 521 Court Nathan Altshiller 1960 Notes on the centroid The Mathematics Teacher 53 1 33 35 doi 10 5951 MT 53 1 0033 JSTOR 27956057 Knorr W 1978 Archimedes lost treatise on the centers of gravity of solids The Mathematical Intelligencer 1 2 102 109 doi 10 1007 BF03023072 ISSN 0343 6993 a b Altshiller Court 1925 p 66 a b Protter amp Morrey 1970 p 526 Protter amp Morrey 1970 p 527 Protter amp Morrey 1970 p 528 Larson 1998 pp 458 460 Sangwin Altshiller Court 1925 p 65 Kay 1969 p 184 Clark Kimberling s Encyclopedia of Triangles Encyclopedia of Triangle Centers Archived from the original on 2012 04 19 Retrieved 2012 06 02 Johnson 2007 p 173 Altshiller Court 1925 p 101 Kay 1969 pp 18 189 225 226 Bottomley Henry Medians and Area Bisectors of a Triangle Retrieved 27 September 2013 a b Altshiller Court 1925 pp 70 71 Kimberling Clark 201 Trilinear distance inequalities for the symmedian point the centroid and other triangle centers Forum Geometricorum 10 135 139 Gerald A Edgar Daniel H Ullman amp Douglas B West 2018 Problems and Solutions The American Mathematical Monthly 125 1 81 89 DOI 10 1080 00029890 2018 1397465 a b Bourke 1997 Leung Kam tim and Suen Suk nam Vectors matrices and geometry Hong Kong University Press 1994 pp 53 54References EditAltshiller Court Nathan 1925 College Geometry An Introduction to the Modern Geometry of the Triangle and the Circle 2nd ed New York Barnes amp Noble LCCN 52013504 Bourke Paul July 1997 Calculating the area and centroid of a polygon Johnson Roger A 2007 Advanced Euclidean Geometry Dover Kay David C 1969 College Geometry New York Holt Rinehart and Winston LCCN 69012075 Larson Roland E Hostetler Robert P Edwards Bruce H 1998 Calculus of a Single Variable 6th ed Houghton Mifflin Company Protter Murray H Morrey Charles B Jr 1970 College Calculus with Analytic Geometry 2nd ed Reading Addison Wesley LCCN 76087042 Sangwin C J Locating the centre of mass by mechanical means PDF archived from the original PDF on November 13 2013External links EditWeisstein Eric W Geometric Centroid MathWorld Encyclopedia of Triangle Centers by Clark Kimberling The centroid is indexed as X 2 Characteristic Property of Centroid at cut the knot Interactive animations showing Centroid of a triangle and Centroid construction with compass and straightedge Experimentally finding the medians and centroid of a triangle at Dynamic Geometry Sketches an interactive dynamic geometry sketch using the gravity simulator of Cinderella Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Centroid amp oldid 1140442264, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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