
Equilateral triangle
In
geometry, an 'equilateral triangle' is a
triangle in which all three sides have equal lengths. In traditional or
Euclidean geometry, equilateral triangles are also
equiangular; that is, all three internal angles are also equal to each other and are each 60°. They are
regular polygons.
The area of an equilateral triangle with sides of length ''l'' is
and its
altitude is
.
It is the most symmetrical triangle, having 3 lines of
reflection and
rotational symmetry of order 3 about its center.
Its
symmetry group is the
dihedral group of order 6 ''D''
3.
Equilateral triangles are found in many other geometric constructs. They form faces of regular and uniform
polyhedra. Three of the five
Platonic solids are composed of equilateral triangles. In particular, the
regular tetrahedron has four equilateral triangles for faces and can be considered the three dimensional analogue of the shape. The plane can be
tiled using equilateral triangles giving the
triangular tiling.
A result finding an equilateral triangle associated to any triangle is
Morley's trisector theorem.
Almost-equilateral Heronian triangles
A
Heronian triangle is a triangle with rational sides and rational area. Since the area of an equilateral triangle with rational sides is an
irrational number, no equilateral triangle is Heronian. However, there is a unique sequence of Heronian triangles that are "almost equilateral" because the three sides, expressed as integers, are of the form ''n'' − 1, ''n'', ''n'' + 1. The first few examples of these almost-equilateral triangles are set forth in the following table.
| ''n'' − 1 | ''n'' | ''n'' + 1 | Area |
|---|
| 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 |
| 13 | 14 | 15 | 84 |
| 51 | 52 | 53 | 1170 |
| 193 | 194 | 195 | 16296 |
Subsequent values of ''n'' can be found by multiplying the last known value by 4, then subtracting the next to the last one (52 = 4 × 14 − 4, 194 = 4 × 52 − 14, etc). This sequence can also be generated from the solutions to the
Pell equation ''x''² − 3''y''² = 1, which can in turn be derived from the
regular continued fraction expansion for the square root of three. (Murasaki, 2004)
In culture and society
Equilateral triangles have frequently appeared in man made constructions:
★ Some
archaeological sites have equilateral triangles as part of their construction, for example
Lepenski Vir in Serbia.
★ The shape also occurs in modern architecture such as
Randhurst Mall and the
Jefferson National Expansion Memorial.
★ The
Seal of the President of the Philippines and
Flag of Junqueirópolis contain equilateral triangles.
★ The shape has been given mystical significance, as a representation of the
trinity in
The Two Babylons and forming part of the
tetractys figure used by the
Pythagoreans.
See also
★
Triangle
★
Trigonometry.
★
Viviani's theorem
References
★ Takeaki Murasaki (2004),
''On the Heronian Triple (n+1, n, n−1)'', Sci. Rep. Fac. Educ., Gunma Univ. 52, 9-15.
External links
★
MathWorld - an overview of the Euclidean construction of an equilateral triangle