Line Segment - Wikipedia
Line Segment - Wikipedia
Properties
A line segment is a connected, non-
empty set.
If V is a topological vector space, then a
closed line segment is a closed set in V.
However, an open line segment is an
open set in V if and only if V is one-
dimensional.
More generally than above, the concept
of a line segment can be defined in an
ordered geometry.
A pair of line segments can be any one
of the following: intersecting, parallel,
skew, or none of these. The last
possibility is a way that line segments
differ from lines: if two nonparallel lines
are in the same Euclidean plane then
they must cross each other, but that
need not be true of segments.
In proofs
In an axiomatic treatment of geometry, the
notion of betweenness is either assumed
to satisfy a certain number of axioms, or
defined in terms of an isometry of a line
(used as a coordinate system).
Segments play an important role in other
theories. For example, a set is convex if
the segment that joins any two points of
the set is contained in the set. This is
important because it transforms some of
the analysis of convex sets, to the analysis
of a line segment. The segment addition
postulate can be used to add congruent
segment or segments with equal lengths,
and consequently substitute other
segments into another statement to make
segments congruent.
As a degenerate ellipse
A line segment can be viewed as a
degenerate case of an ellipse, in which the
semiminor axis goes to zero, the foci go to
the endpoints, and the eccentricity goes to
one. A standard definition of an ellipse is
the set of points for which the sum of a
point's distances to two foci is a constant;
if this constant equals the distance
between the foci, the line segment is the
result. A complete orbit of this ellipse
traverses the line segment twice. As a
degenerate orbit, this is a radial elliptic
trajectory.
Triangles …
Quadrilaterals …
In addition to the sides and diagonals of a
quadrilateral, some important segments
are the two bimedians (connecting the
midpoints of opposite sides) and the four
maltitudes (each perpendicularly
connecting one side to the midpoint of the
opposite side).
Generalizations
Analogous to straight line segments
above, one can also define arcs as
segments of a curve.
See also
Broken line
Interval (mathematics)
Line (geometry)
Line segment intersection, the
algorithmic problem of finding
intersecting pairs in a collection of line
segments
Spirangle
Segment addition postulate
Notes
1. "List of Geometry and Trigonometry
Symbols" . Math Vault. 2020-04-17.
Retrieved 2020-09-01.
2. "Line Segment Definition - Math Open
Reference" . www.mathopenref.com.
Retrieved 2020-09-01.
3. Harry F. Davis & Arthur David Snider
(1988) Introduction to Vector Analysis,
5th edition, page 1, Wm. C. Brown
Publishers ISBN 0-697-06814-5
4. Matiur Rahman & Isaac Mulolani
(2001) Applied Vector Analysis, pages
9 & 10, CRC Press ISBN 0-8493-1088-1
5. Eutiquio C. Young (1978) Vector and
Tensor Analysis, pages 2 & 3, Marcel
Dekker ISBN 0-8247-6671-7
References
David Hilbert The Foundations of
Geometry. The Open Court Publishing
Company 1950, p. 4
External links
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