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Heron's formula

In geometry, Heron's formula (or Hero's formula) gives the area A of a triangle in terms of the three side lengths a, b, c. If is the semiperimeter of the triangle, the area is,[1]

A triangle with sides a, b, and c

It is named after first-century engineer Heron of Alexandria (or Hero) who proved it in his work Metrica, though it was probably known centuries earlier.

Example

Let ABC be the triangle with sides a = 4, b = 13 and c = 15. This triangle’s semiperimeter is

 

and so the area is

 

In this example, the side lengths and area are integers, making it a Heronian triangle. However, Heron's formula works equally well in cases where one or more of the side lengths are not integers.

Alternate expressions

Heron's formula can also be written in terms of just the side lengths instead of using the semiperimeter, in several ways,

 

After expansion, the expression under the square root is a quadratic polynomial of the squared side lengths a2, b2, c2.

The same relation can be expressed using the Cayley–Menger determinant,

 

History

The formula is credited to Heron (or Hero) of Alexandria (fl. 60 AD),[2] and a proof can be found in his book Metrica. Mathematical historian Thomas Heath suggested that Archimedes knew the formula over two centuries earlier,[3] and since Metrica is a collection of the mathematical knowledge available in the ancient world, it is possible that the formula predates the reference given in that work.[4]

A formula equivalent to Heron's, namely,

 

was discovered by the Chinese. It was published in Mathematical Treatise in Nine Sections (Qin Jiushao, 1247).[5]

Proofs

There are many ways to prove Heron's formula, for example using trigonometry as below, or the incenter and one excircle of the triangle,[6] or as a special case of De Gua's theorem (for the particular case of acute triangles).[7]

Trigonometric proof using the law of cosines

A modern proof, which uses algebra and is quite different from the one provided by Heron, follows.[8] Let a, b, c be the sides of the triangle and α, β, γ the angles opposite those sides. Applying the law of cosines we get

 

From this proof, we get the algebraic statement that

 

The altitude of the triangle on base a has length b sin γ, and it follows

 

Algebraic proof using the Pythagorean theorem

 
Triangle with altitude h cutting base c into d + (cd)

The following proof is very similar to one given by Raifaizen.[9] By the Pythagorean theorem we have b2 = h2 + d2 and a2 = h2 + (cd)2 according to the figure at the right. Subtracting these yields a2b2 = c2 − 2cd. This equation allows us to express d in terms of the sides of the triangle:

 

For the height of the triangle we have that h2 = b2d2. By replacing d with the formula given above and applying the difference of squares identity we get

 

We now apply this result to the formula that calculates the area of a triangle from its height:

 

Trigonometric proof using the law of cotangents

 
Geometrical significance of sa, sb, and sc. See the law of cotangents for the reasoning behind this.

If r is the radius of the incircle of the triangle, then the triangle can be broken into three triangles of equal altitude r and bases a, b, and c. Their combined area is

 

where   is the semiperimeter.

The triangle can alternately be broken into six triangles (in congruent pairs) of altitude r and bases sa, sb, and sc, of combined area (see law of cotangents)

 

The middle step above is   the triple cotangent identity, which applies because the sum of half-angles is  

Combining the two, we get

 

from which the result follows.

Numerical stability

Heron's formula as given above is numerically unstable for triangles with a very small angle when using floating-point arithmetic. A stable alternative[10][11] involves arranging the lengths of the sides so that abc and computing

 

The brackets in the above formula are required in order to prevent numerical instability in the evaluation.

Similar triangle-area formulae

Three other formulae for the area of a general triangle have a similar structure as Heron's formula, expressed in terms of different variables.

First, if ma, mb, and mc are the medians from sides a, b, and c respectively, and their semi-sum is   then[12]

 

Next, if ha, hb, and hc are the altitudes from sides a, b, and c respectively, and semi-sum of their reciprocals is   then[13]

 

Finally, if α, β, and γ are the three angle measures of the triangle, and the semi-sum of their sines is   then[14][15]

 

where D is the diameter of the circumcircle,   This last formula coincides with the standard Heron formula when the circumcircle has unit diameter.

Generalizations

 
Cyclic Quadrilateral

Heron's formula is a special case of Brahmagupta's formula for the area of a cyclic quadrilateral. Heron's formula and Brahmagupta's formula are both special cases of Bretschneider's formula for the area of a quadrilateral. Heron's formula can be obtained from Brahmagupta's formula or Bretschneider's formula by setting one of the sides of the quadrilateral to zero.

Brahmagupta's formula gives the area K of a cyclic quadrilateral whose sides have lengths a, b, c, d as

 

where s, the semiperimeter, is defined to be

 

Heron's formula is also a special case of the formula for the area of a trapezoid or trapezium based only on its sides. Heron's formula is obtained by setting the smaller parallel side to zero.

Expressing Heron's formula with a Cayley–Menger determinant in terms of the squares of the distances between the three given vertices,

 

illustrates its similarity to Tartaglia's formula for the volume of a three-simplex.

Another generalization of Heron's formula to pentagons and hexagons inscribed in a circle was discovered by David P. Robbins.[16]

Heron-type formula for the volume of a tetrahedron

If U, V, W, u, v, w are lengths of edges of the tetrahedron (first three form a triangle; u opposite to U and so on), then[17]

 

where

 

Heron formulae in non-Euclidean geometries

There are also formulae for the area of a triangle in terms of its side lengths for triangles in the sphere or the hyperbolic plane. [18] For a triangle in the sphere with side lengths  , half perimeter   and area   such a formula is

 
while for the hyperbolic plane we have
 

See also

References

  1. ^ Kendig, Keith (2000). "Is a 2000-year-old formula still keeping some secrets?". The American Mathematical Monthly. 107 (5): 402–415. doi:10.1080/00029890.2000.12005213. JSTOR 2695295. MR 1763392. S2CID 1214184.
  2. ^ Id, Yusuf; Kennedy, E. S. (1969). "A medieval proof of Heron's formula". The Mathematics Teacher. 62 (7): 585–587. doi:10.5951/MT.62.7.0585. JSTOR 27958225. MR 0256819.
  3. ^ Heath, Thomas L. (1921). A History of Greek Mathematics. Vol. II. Oxford University Press. pp. 321–323.
  4. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Heron's Formula". MathWorld.
  5. ^ 秦, 九韶 (1773). "卷三上, 三斜求积". 數學九章 (四庫全書本) (in Chinese).
  6. ^ "Personal email communication between mathematicians John Conway and Peter Doyle". 15 December 1997. Retrieved 25 September 2020.
  7. ^ Lévy-Leblond, Jean-Marc (2020-09-14). "A Symmetric 3D Proof of Heron's Formula". The Mathematical Intelligencer. 43 (2): 37–39. doi:10.1007/s00283-020-09996-8. ISSN 0343-6993.
  8. ^ Niven, Ivan (1981). Maxima and Minima Without Calculus. The Mathematical Association of America. pp. 7–8.
  9. ^ Raifaizen, Claude H. (1971). "A Simpler Proof of Heron's Formula". Mathematics Magazine. 44 (1): 27–28. doi:10.1080/0025570X.1971.11976093.
  10. ^ Sterbenz, Pat H. (1974-05-01). Floating-Point Computation. Prentice-Hall Series in Automatic Computation (1st ed.). Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, USA: Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-322495-3.
  11. ^ William M. Kahan (24 March 2000). "Miscalculating Area and Angles of a Needle-like Triangle" (PDF).
  12. ^ Benyi, Arpad, "A Heron-type formula for the triangle," Mathematical Gazette 87, July 2003, 324–326.
  13. ^ Mitchell, Douglas W., "A Heron-type formula for the reciprocal area of a triangle," Mathematical Gazette 89, November 2005, 494.
  14. ^ Mitchell, Douglas W. (2009). "A Heron-type area formula in terms of sines". Mathematical Gazette. 93: 108–109. doi:10.1017/S002555720018430X. S2CID 132042882.
  15. ^ Kocik, Jerzy; Solecki, Andrzej (2009). "Disentangling a triangle" (PDF). American Mathematical Monthly. 116 (3): 228–237. doi:10.1080/00029890.2009.11920932. S2CID 28155804.
  16. ^ D. P. Robbins, "Areas of Polygons Inscribed in a Circle", Discr. Comput. Geom. 12, 223-236, 1994.
  17. ^ W. Kahan, "What has the Volume of a Tetrahedron to do with Computer Programming Languages?", [1], pp. 16–17.
  18. ^ Page 66 in Alekseevskij, D. V.; Vinberg, E. B.; Solodovnikov, A. S. (1993), "Geometry of spaces of constant curvature", in Gamkrelidze, R. V.; Vinberg, E. B. (eds.), Geometry. II: Spaces of constant curvature, Encycl. Math. Sci., vol. 29, Springer-Verlag, pp. 1–138, ISBN 1-56085-072-8

External links

  • A Proof of the Pythagorean Theorem From Heron's Formula at cut-the-knot
  • Interactive applet and area calculator using Heron's Formula
  • J. H. Conway discussion on Heron's Formula
  • "Heron's Formula and Brahmagupta's Generalization". MathPages.com.
  • A Geometric Proof of Heron's Formula
  • An alternative proof of Heron's Formula without words
  • Factoring Heron

heron, formula, this, article, about, calculating, area, triangle, calculating, square, root, heron, method, geometry, hero, formula, gives, area, triangle, terms, three, side, lengths, textstyle, tfrac, semiperimeter, triangle, area, triangle, with, sides, di. This article is about calculating the area of a triangle For calculating a square root see Heron s method In geometry Heron s formula or Hero s formula gives the area A of a triangle in terms of the three side lengths a b c If s 1 2 a b c textstyle s tfrac 1 2 a b c is the semiperimeter of the triangle the area is 1 A triangle with sides a b and c A s s a s b s c displaystyle A sqrt s s a s b s c It is named after first century engineer Heron of Alexandria or Hero who proved it in his work Metrica though it was probably known centuries earlier Contents 1 Example 2 Alternate expressions 3 History 4 Proofs 4 1 Trigonometric proof using the law of cosines 4 2 Algebraic proof using the Pythagorean theorem 4 3 Trigonometric proof using the law of cotangents 5 Numerical stability 6 Similar triangle area formulae 7 Generalizations 7 1 Heron type formula for the volume of a tetrahedron 7 2 Heron formulae in non Euclidean geometries 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksExample EditLet ABC be the triangle with sides a 4 b 13 and c 15 This triangle s semiperimeter is s a b c 2 4 13 15 2 16 displaystyle s frac a b c 2 frac 4 13 15 2 16 and so the area is A s s a s b s c 16 16 4 16 13 16 15 16 12 3 1 576 24 displaystyle begin aligned A amp sqrt s left s a right left s b right left s c right sqrt 16 cdot 16 4 cdot 16 13 cdot 16 15 amp sqrt 16 cdot 12 cdot 3 cdot 1 sqrt 576 24 end aligned In this example the side lengths and area are integers making it a Heronian triangle However Heron s formula works equally well in cases where one or more of the side lengths are not integers Alternate expressions EditHeron s formula can also be written in terms of just the side lengths instead of using the semiperimeter in several ways A 1 4 a b c a b c a b c a b c 1 4 2 a 2 b 2 a 2 c 2 b 2 c 2 a 4 b 4 c 4 1 4 a 2 b 2 c 2 2 2 a 4 b 4 c 4 1 4 4 a 2 b 2 a 2 c 2 b 2 c 2 a 2 b 2 c 2 2 1 4 4 a 2 b 2 a 2 b 2 c 2 2 displaystyle begin aligned A amp tfrac 1 4 sqrt a b c a b c a b c a b c 6mu amp tfrac 1 4 sqrt 2 a 2 b 2 a 2 c 2 b 2 c 2 a 4 b 4 c 4 6mu amp tfrac 1 4 sqrt a 2 b 2 c 2 2 2 a 4 b 4 c 4 6mu amp tfrac 1 4 sqrt 4 a 2 b 2 a 2 c 2 b 2 c 2 a 2 b 2 c 2 2 6mu amp tfrac 1 4 sqrt 4a 2 b 2 a 2 b 2 c 2 2 end aligned After expansion the expression under the square root is a quadratic polynomial of the squared side lengths a2 b2 c2 The same relation can be expressed using the Cayley Menger determinant 16 A 2 0 a 2 b 2 1 a 2 0 c 2 1 b 2 c 2 0 1 1 1 1 0 displaystyle 16A 2 begin vmatrix 0 amp a 2 amp b 2 amp 1 a 2 amp 0 amp c 2 amp 1 b 2 amp c 2 amp 0 amp 1 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 end vmatrix History EditThe formula is credited to Heron or Hero of Alexandria fl 60 AD 2 and a proof can be found in his book Metrica Mathematical historian Thomas Heath suggested that Archimedes knew the formula over two centuries earlier 3 and since Metrica is a collection of the mathematical knowledge available in the ancient world it is possible that the formula predates the reference given in that work 4 A formula equivalent to Heron s namely A 1 2 a 2 c 2 a 2 c 2 b 2 2 2 displaystyle A frac 1 2 sqrt a 2 c 2 left frac a 2 c 2 b 2 2 right 2 was discovered by the Chinese It was published in Mathematical Treatise in Nine Sections Qin Jiushao 1247 5 Proofs EditThere are many ways to prove Heron s formula for example using trigonometry as below or the incenter and one excircle of the triangle 6 or as a special case of De Gua s theorem for the particular case of acute triangles 7 Trigonometric proof using the law of cosines Edit A modern proof which uses algebra and is quite different from the one provided by Heron follows 8 Let a b c be the sides of the triangle and a b g the angles opposite those sides Applying the law of cosines we get cos g a 2 b 2 c 2 2 a b displaystyle cos gamma frac a 2 b 2 c 2 2ab From this proof we get the algebraic statement that sin g 1 cos 2 g 4 a 2 b 2 a 2 b 2 c 2 2 2 a b displaystyle sin gamma sqrt 1 cos 2 gamma frac sqrt 4a 2 b 2 a 2 b 2 c 2 2 2ab The altitude of the triangle on base a has length b sin g and it follows A 1 2 base altitude 1 2 a b sin g a b 4 a b 4 a 2 b 2 a 2 b 2 c 2 2 1 4 a 4 b 4 c 4 2 a 2 b 2 2 a 2 c 2 2 b 2 c 2 1 4 a b c a b c a b c a b c a b c 2 a b c 2 a b c 2 a b c 2 s s a s b s c displaystyle begin aligned A amp tfrac 1 2 mbox base mbox altitude 6mu amp tfrac 1 2 ab sin gamma 6mu amp frac ab 4ab sqrt 4a 2 b 2 a 2 b 2 c 2 2 6mu amp tfrac 1 4 sqrt a 4 b 4 c 4 2a 2 b 2 2a 2 c 2 2b 2 c 2 6mu amp tfrac 1 4 sqrt a b c a b c a b c a b c 6mu amp sqrt left frac a b c 2 right left frac a b c 2 right left frac a b c 2 right left frac a b c 2 right 6mu amp sqrt s s a s b s c end aligned Algebraic proof using the Pythagorean theorem Edit Triangle with altitude h cutting base c into d c d The following proof is very similar to one given by Raifaizen 9 By the Pythagorean theorem we have b2 h2 d2 and a2 h2 c d 2 according to the figure at the right Subtracting these yields a2 b2 c2 2cd This equation allows us to express d in terms of the sides of the triangle d a 2 b 2 c 2 2 c displaystyle d frac a 2 b 2 c 2 2c For the height of the triangle we have that h2 b2 d2 By replacing d with the formula given above and applying the difference of squares identity we get h 2 b 2 a 2 b 2 c 2 2 c 2 2 b c a 2 b 2 c 2 2 b c a 2 b 2 c 2 4 c 2 b c 2 a 2 a 2 b c 2 4 c 2 b c a b c a a b c a b c 4 c 2 2 s a 2 s 2 s c 2 s b 4 c 2 4 s s a s b s c c 2 displaystyle begin aligned h 2 amp b 2 left frac a 2 b 2 c 2 2c right 2 amp frac 2bc a 2 b 2 c 2 2bc a 2 b 2 c 2 4c 2 amp frac big b c 2 a 2 big big a 2 b c 2 big 4c 2 amp frac b c a b c a a b c a b c 4c 2 amp frac 2 s a cdot 2s cdot 2 s c cdot 2 s b 4c 2 amp frac 4s s a s b s c c 2 end aligned We now apply this result to the formula that calculates the area of a triangle from its height A c h 2 c 2 4 4 s s a s b s c c 2 s s a s b s c displaystyle begin aligned A amp frac ch 2 amp sqrt frac c 2 4 cdot frac 4s s a s b s c c 2 amp sqrt s s a s b s c end aligned Trigonometric proof using the law of cotangents Edit Geometrical significance of s a s b and s c See the law of cotangents for the reasoning behind this If r is the radius of the incircle of the triangle then the triangle can be broken into three triangles of equal altitude r and bases a b and c Their combined area is A 1 2 a r 1 2 b r 1 2 c r r s displaystyle A tfrac 1 2 ar tfrac 1 2 br tfrac 1 2 cr rs where s 1 2 a b c textstyle s tfrac 1 2 a b c is the semiperimeter The triangle can alternately be broken into six triangles in congruent pairs of altitude r and bases s a s b and s c of combined area see law of cotangents A r s a r s b r s c r 2 s a r s b r s c r r 2 cot a 2 cot b 2 cot g 2 r 2 cot a 2 cot b 2 cot g 2 r 2 s a r s b r s c r s a s b s c r displaystyle begin aligned A amp r s a r s b r s c 2mu amp r 2 left frac s a r frac s b r frac s c r right 2mu amp r 2 left cot frac alpha 2 cot frac beta 2 cot frac gamma 2 right 3mu amp r 2 left cot frac alpha 2 cot frac beta 2 cot frac gamma 2 right 3mu amp r 2 left frac s a r cdot frac s b r cdot frac s c r right 3mu amp frac s a s b s c r end aligned The middle step above is cot a 2 cot b 2 cot g 2 cot a 2 cot b 2 cot g 2 textstyle cot tfrac alpha 2 cot tfrac beta 2 cot tfrac gamma 2 cot tfrac alpha 2 cot tfrac beta 2 cot tfrac gamma 2 the triple cotangent identity which applies because the sum of half angles is a 2 b 2 g 2 p 2 textstyle tfrac alpha 2 tfrac beta 2 tfrac gamma 2 tfrac pi 2 Combining the two we get A 2 s s a s b s c displaystyle A 2 s s a s b s c from which the result follows Numerical stability EditHeron s formula as given above is numerically unstable for triangles with a very small angle when using floating point arithmetic A stable alternative 10 11 involves arranging the lengths of the sides so that a b c and computing A 1 4 a b c c a b c a b a b c displaystyle A frac 1 4 sqrt big a b c big big c a b big big c a b big big a b c big The brackets in the above formula are required in order to prevent numerical instability in the evaluation Similar triangle area formulae EditThree other formulae for the area of a general triangle have a similar structure as Heron s formula expressed in terms of different variables First if ma mb and mc are the medians from sides a b and c respectively and their semi sum is s 1 2 m a m b m c displaystyle sigma tfrac 1 2 m a m b m c then 12 A 4 3 s s m a s m b s m c displaystyle A frac 4 3 sqrt sigma sigma m a sigma m b sigma m c Next if ha hb and hc are the altitudes from sides a b and c respectively and semi sum of their reciprocals is H 1 2 h a 1 h b 1 h c 1 displaystyle H tfrac 1 2 bigl h a 1 h b 1 h c 1 bigr then 13 A 1 4 H H h a 1 H h b 1 H h c 1 displaystyle A 1 4 sqrt H bigl H h a 1 bigr bigl H h b 1 bigr bigl H h c 1 bigr Finally if a b and g are the three angle measures of the triangle and the semi sum of their sines is S 1 2 sin a sin b sin g displaystyle S tfrac 1 2 sin alpha sin beta sin gamma then 14 15 A D 2 S S sin a S sin b S sin g 1 2 D 2 sin a sin b sin g displaystyle begin aligned A amp D 2 sqrt S S sin alpha S sin beta S sin gamma 5mu amp tfrac 1 2 D 2 sin alpha sin beta sin gamma end aligned where D is the diameter of the circumcircle D a sin a b sin b c sin g textstyle D frac a sin alpha frac b sin beta frac c sin gamma This last formula coincides with the standard Heron formula when the circumcircle has unit diameter Generalizations Edit Cyclic QuadrilateralHeron s formula is a special case of Brahmagupta s formula for the area of a cyclic quadrilateral Heron s formula and Brahmagupta s formula are both special cases of Bretschneider s formula for the area of a quadrilateral Heron s formula can be obtained from Brahmagupta s formula or Bretschneider s formula by setting one of the sides of the quadrilateral to zero Brahmagupta s formula gives the area K of a cyclic quadrilateral whose sides have lengths a b c d as K s a s b s c s d displaystyle K sqrt s a s b s c s d where s the semiperimeter is defined to be s a b c d 2 displaystyle s frac a b c d 2 Heron s formula is also a special case of the formula for the area of a trapezoid or trapezium based only on its sides Heron s formula is obtained by setting the smaller parallel side to zero Expressing Heron s formula with a Cayley Menger determinant in terms of the squares of the distances between the three given vertices A 1 4 0 a 2 b 2 1 a 2 0 c 2 1 b 2 c 2 0 1 1 1 1 0 displaystyle A frac 1 4 sqrt begin vmatrix 0 amp a 2 amp b 2 amp 1 a 2 amp 0 amp c 2 amp 1 b 2 amp c 2 amp 0 amp 1 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 end vmatrix illustrates its similarity to Tartaglia s formula for the volume of a three simplex Another generalization of Heron s formula to pentagons and hexagons inscribed in a circle was discovered by David P Robbins 16 Heron type formula for the volume of a tetrahedron Edit If U V W u v w are lengths of edges of the tetrahedron first three form a triangle u opposite to U and so on then 17 volume a b c d a b c d a b c d a b c d 192 u v w displaystyle text volume frac sqrt a b c d a b c d a b c d a b c d 192 u v w where a x Y Z b y Z X c z X Y d x y z X w U v U v w x U v w v w U Y u V w V w u y V w u w u V Z v W u W u v z W u v u v W displaystyle begin aligned a amp sqrt xYZ b amp sqrt yZX c amp sqrt zXY d amp sqrt xyz X amp w U v U v w x amp U v w v w U Y amp u V w V w u y amp V w u w u V Z amp v W u W u v z amp W u v u v W end aligned Heron formulae in non Euclidean geometries Edit There are also formulae for the area of a triangle in terms of its side lengths for triangles in the sphere or the hyperbolic plane 18 For a triangle in the sphere with side lengths a b c displaystyle a b c half perimeter s a b c 2 displaystyle s a b c 2 and area S displaystyle S such a formula istan 2 S 4 tan s 2 tan s a 2 tan s b 2 tan s c 2 displaystyle tan 2 frac S 4 tan frac s 2 tan frac s a 2 tan frac s b 2 tan frac s c 2 while for the hyperbolic plane we have tan 2 S 4 tanh s 2 tanh s a 2 tanh s b 2 tanh s c 2 displaystyle tan 2 frac S 4 tanh frac s 2 tanh frac s a 2 tanh frac s b 2 tanh frac s c 2 See also EditShoelace formulaReferences Edit Kendig Keith 2000 Is a 2000 year old formula still keeping some secrets The American Mathematical Monthly 107 5 402 415 doi 10 1080 00029890 2000 12005213 JSTOR 2695295 MR 1763392 S2CID 1214184 Id Yusuf Kennedy E S 1969 A medieval proof of Heron s formula The Mathematics Teacher 62 7 585 587 doi 10 5951 MT 62 7 0585 JSTOR 27958225 MR 0256819 Heath Thomas L 1921 A History of Greek Mathematics Vol II Oxford University Press pp 321 323 Weisstein Eric W Heron s Formula MathWorld 秦 九韶 1773 卷三上 三斜求积 數學九章 四庫全書本 in Chinese Personal email communication between mathematicians John Conway and Peter Doyle 15 December 1997 Retrieved 25 September 2020 Levy Leblond Jean Marc 2020 09 14 A Symmetric 3D Proof of Heron s Formula The Mathematical Intelligencer 43 2 37 39 doi 10 1007 s00283 020 09996 8 ISSN 0343 6993 Niven Ivan 1981 Maxima and Minima Without Calculus The Mathematical Association of America pp 7 8 Raifaizen Claude H 1971 A Simpler Proof of Heron s Formula Mathematics Magazine 44 1 27 28 doi 10 1080 0025570X 1971 11976093 Sterbenz Pat H 1974 05 01 Floating Point Computation Prentice Hall Series in Automatic Computation 1st ed Englewood Cliffs New Jersey USA Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 322495 3 William M Kahan 24 March 2000 Miscalculating Area and Angles of a Needle like Triangle PDF Benyi Arpad A Heron type formula for the triangle Mathematical Gazette 87 July 2003 324 326 Mitchell Douglas W A Heron type formula for the reciprocal area of a triangle Mathematical Gazette 89 November 2005 494 Mitchell Douglas W 2009 A Heron type area formula in terms of sines Mathematical Gazette 93 108 109 doi 10 1017 S002555720018430X S2CID 132042882 Kocik Jerzy Solecki Andrzej 2009 Disentangling a triangle PDF American Mathematical Monthly 116 3 228 237 doi 10 1080 00029890 2009 11920932 S2CID 28155804 D P Robbins Areas of Polygons Inscribed in a Circle Discr Comput Geom 12 223 236 1994 W Kahan What has the Volume of a Tetrahedron to do with Computer Programming Languages 1 pp 16 17 Page 66 in Alekseevskij D V Vinberg E B Solodovnikov A S 1993 Geometry of spaces of constant curvature in Gamkrelidze R V Vinberg E B eds Geometry II Spaces of constant curvature Encycl Math Sci vol 29 Springer Verlag pp 1 138 ISBN 1 56085 072 8External links EditA Proof of the Pythagorean Theorem From Heron s Formula at cut the knot Interactive applet and area calculator using Heron s Formula J H Conway discussion on Heron s Formula Heron s Formula and Brahmagupta s Generalization MathPages com A Geometric Proof of Heron s Formula An alternative proof of Heron s Formula without words Factoring Heron Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Heron 27s formula amp oldid 1129126407, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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