(Redirected from Rhomb):''For other uses of the word rhombus, see
Rhombus (disambiguation)''

Two rhombi.
In
geometry, a 'rhombus' (or 'rhomb'; plural 'rhombi') is a
quadrilateral in which all of the sides are of equal length, i.e., it is an
equilateral quadrangle. If any angle of an equilateral quadrangle is a right angle, then all its angles are right angles and it is also a
''square''. In any rhombus opposite sides will be
parallel. Thus, the rhombus is a special case of the
parallelogram. One suggestive analogy is that the rhombus is to the parallelogram as the square is to the
rectangle. A rhombus is also a special case of a
kite, that is, a quadrilateral with two pairs of equal adjacent sides. The opposite sides of a kite are not parallel unless the kite is also a rhombus.
A rhombus in the plane has five
degrees of freedom: one for the shape, one for the size, one for the
orientation, and two for the position.
The diagonals of a rhombus are
perpendicular to each other. Hence, by joining the midpoints of each side, a
rectangle can be produced.
One of the five 2D
lattice types is the rhombic lattice, also called centered rectangular lattice.
If A, B, C and D were the
vertices of the rhombus, named in agreement with the figure (higher on this page). Using
to represent the vector from A to B, one notices that
.
The last equality comes from the parallelism of CD and AB.
Taking the
inner product,
:
::
::
since the norms of AB and BC are equal and since the inner product is
bilinear and symmetric. The inner product of the diagonals is zero if and only if they are perpendicular.
Area
The
area of any rhombus is a half the product of the lengths of its
diagonals:
Because the rhombus is a
parallelogram with four equal sides, the area also equals the length of a side (B) multiplied by the perpendicular distance between two opposite sides(H):
Origin
The origin of the word ''rhombus'' is from the
Greek word for something that spins.
Euclid uses the word ''ρομβος''; and in his translation Heath says it is apparently drawn from the Greek word ''ρεμβω'', to turn round and round. He also points out that
Archimedes used the term "solid rhombus" for two right circular
cones sharing a common base. For more on the origin of the word, see ''rhombus'' at the
MathWords web page.
External links
★
Parallelogram and Rhombus - Animated course (Construction, Circumference, Area)
★
Rhombus definition. Math Open Reference With interactive applet.
★
Rhombus area. Math Open Reference Shows three different ways to compute the area of a rhombus, with interactive applet.