Kite (geometry)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about the geometric shape. For the flying object, see Kite.
In geometry, a kite, or deltoid, is a quadrilateral with two pairs of equal adjacent sides. Technically, the pairs of sides are disjoint congruent and adjacent. This is in contrast to a parallelogram, where the equal sides are opposite. The geometric object is named for the wind-blown, flying kite (which is itself named for a bird), which in its simple form often has this shape.
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[edit] Properties
The pairs of equal sides imply many properties:
- One diagonal divides the kite into two isosceles triangles, and the other divides the kite into two congruent triangles
- Kites always posses at least one symmetry axis; that axis is the diagonal that divides it into two congruent triangles
- A kite possesses an inscribed circle; that is, there exists a circle that is tangent to all four sides.
- If d1 and d2 are the lengths of the diagonals, then the area is
- Alternatively, if a and b are the lengths of the sides, and θ the angle between unequal sides, then the area is
[edit] Special cases
- When the kite is concave, it becomes an arrowhead[1], rather than a kite, and is also the only possible concave quadrilateral.
- If all the sides are the same length, the quadrilateral is called a rhombus.
[edit] There are 4 Special Kites:
- Equilateral Kites: one of the "two triangles" that make up the kite has all equal sides.
m<A=m<ABD=m<ADB=60° AB≅BD≅AD
- Right Kite: one of the "two triangles" that make up the kite has a 90° angle at one of it's "points"
m<C=90° DC=BC=x, DB=2x
- "Y:Z" Kites: the pair of similar sides are proportionate to the other pair of similar sides
DC=BC=Yx, AB=AD=Zx Note: The only exception is 1:2 kites, which are Equilateral Right Kites
- Equilateral Right Kites: a combination of both Equilateral Kites and Right Kites where one of the kite's "triangles" are equilateral and the opposite "triangle" has its "points" equal to 90°
m<A=60° m<B=m<D=105° (m<DBC=BDC=45°, m<ADB=m<ABD=60°) AB≅AD≅DB=2x, DC≅BC=x
[edit] See also
[edit] Notes
[edit] External links
- Eric W. Weisstein, Kite at MathWorld.
- Kite definition (geometry) With interactive animation
- Area of a kite, formulae With interactive animation
- Extreme Kites Australia - Very popular site for kiting information