In geometry, a parallelogram is a quadrilateral with two sets of parallel sides. The opposite sides of a parallelogram are of equal length, and the opposite angles of a parallelogram are congruent. The three-dimensional counterpart of a parallelogram is a parallelepiped.
Each diagonal bisects the parallelogram into two congruent triangles.
It is possible to create a tessellation of a plane with any parallelogram.
The parallelogram is a special case of the trapezoid.
The rectangle is a special case of the parallelogram.
The rhombus is a special case of the parallelogram.
Computing the area of a parallelogram
Let and let denote the matrix with columns a and b. Then the area of the parallelogram generated by a and b is equal to | det(V) |
Let and let . Then the area of the parallelogram generated by a and b is equal to
Let , and let . Then the area of the parallelogram is equivalent to the absolute value of the determinant of a matrix built using a, b and c as rows with the last column padded using ones as follows:
Proof that diagonals bisect each other
To prove that the diagonals of a parallelogram bisect each other, first note a few pairs of equivalent angles:
Since they are angles that a transversal makes with parallel linesAB and DC.
The area of the parallelogram to the right (the blue area) is the total area of the rectangle less the area of the two orange triangles. The area of the rectangle is
and the area of a single orange triangle is
or
Therefore, the area of the parallelogram is
Alternate method
Step one: ends of parallelogram are chopped off
Step two: pieces are rearranged
An alternative, less mathematically sophisticated method, to show the area is by rearrangement of the area. First, take the two ends of the parallelogram and chop them off to form two more triangles. Each of these two new triangles are equal in every way with the orange triangles. This first step is shown to the right.
The second step is merely swap the left orange triangle with the right blue triangle. Clearly, the two blue triangles plus the blue rectangle have an area equivalent to BH.
To further demonstrate this, the first image on the right could be printed off and cut up along the lines:
Cut along the lines between the orange triangles and the blue parallelogram
Cut along the vertical lines on the end to form the two blue triangles and the blue rectangle
Rearrange all five pieces as shown in the second image