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| Question 1006481:  Prove that in a parallelogram the sum of the squares of the diagonals equals the sum of the squares of the four sides
 Found 2 solutions by  ikleyn, jim_thompson5910:
 Answer by ikleyn(52879)
      (Show Source): Answer by jim_thompson5910(35256)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! Claim: In a parallelogram the sum of the squares of the diagonals equals the sum of the squares of the four sides ----------------------------------------------
 
 I'm going to use coordinate geometry and the distance formula to prove the claim
 
 Let's define a parallelogram ABCD (AB || CD and AC || BD) such that the four points are
 
 A = (0,0)
 B = (p,0)
 C = (p+q,r)
 D = (q,r)
 where p,q, and r are constants (fixed numbers)
 Let's make p,q,r positive numbers
 
 
 Let's also define these distances
 m = d(A,B) = d(C,D)
 n = d(B,C) = d(A,D)
 s = d(A,C)
 t = d(B,D)
 
 the notation d(A,B) means "the distance between points A and B"
 
 The distance formula will be used here
 d(P,Q) = sqrt((x1-x2)^2 + (y1-y2)^2)
 where P = (x1,y1) and Q = (x2,y2)
 
 Let's calculate the lengths of the sides
 
 
 Distance from A to B (ie length of side AB)
 d(A,B) = sqrt((x1-x2)^2 + (y1-y2)^2)
 d(A,B) = sqrt((0-p)^2 + (0-0)^2)
 d(A,B) = sqrt((-p)^2 + (0)^2)
 d(A,B) = sqrt(p^2+0)
 d(A,B) = sqrt(p^2)
 d(A,B) = p
 
 
 Distance from B to C (ie length of side BC)
 d(B,C) = sqrt((x1-x2)^2 + (y1-y2)^2)
 d(B,C) = sqrt((p-(p+q))^2 + (0-r)^2)
 d(B,C) = sqrt((p-p-q)^2 + (-r)^2)
 d(B,C) = sqrt((-q)^2 + (-r)^2)
 d(B,C) = sqrt(q^2+r^2)
 
 
 Distance from C to D (ie length of side CD)
 d(C,D) = sqrt((x1-x2)^2 + (y1-y2)^2)
 d(C,D) = sqrt(((p+q)-q)^2 + (r-r)^2)
 d(C,D) = sqrt((p)^2 + (0)^2)
 d(C,D) = sqrt(p^2)
 d(C,D) = p
 
 
 Distance from A to D (ie length of side AD)
 d(A,D) = sqrt((x1-x2)^2 + (y1-y2)^2)
 d(A,D) = sqrt((0-q)^2 + (0-r)^2)
 d(A,D) = sqrt((-q)^2 + (-r)^2)
 d(A,D) = sqrt(q^2+r^2)
 
 
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 Let's calculate the lengths of the diagonals
 
 A = (0,0)
 B = (p,0)
 C = (p+q,r)
 D = (q,r)
 
 Distance from A to C (ie length of diagonal AC)
 d(A,C) = sqrt((x1-x2)^2 + (y1-y2)^2)
 d(A,C) = sqrt((0-(p+q))^2 + (0-r)^2)
 d(A,C) = sqrt((-(p+q))^2 + (-r)^2)
 d(A,C) = sqrt((p+q)^2 + r^2)
 d(A,C) = sqrt(p^2+2pq+q^2 + r^2)
 
 
 Distance from B to D (ie length of diagonal BD)
 d(B,D) = sqrt((x1-x2)^2 + (y1-y2)^2)
 d(B,D) = sqrt((p-q)^2 + (0-r)^2)
 d(B,D) = sqrt((p-q)^2 + (-r)^2)
 d(B,D) = sqrt(p^2-2pq+q^2 + r^2)
 
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 Summary so far:
 sides
 m = d(A,B) = p
 m = d(C,D) = p
 n = d(B,C) = sqrt(q^2+r^2)
 n = d(A,D) = sqrt(q^2+r^2)
 
 diagonals
 s = d(A,C) = sqrt(p^2+2pq+q^2 + r^2)
 t = d(B,D) = sqrt(p^2-2pq+q^2 + r^2)
 
 
 Notice we get this if we square both sides of each equation (above)
 m^2 = p^2
 n^2 = q^2+r^2
 s^2 = p^2+2pq+q^2 + r^2
 t^2 = p^2-2pq+q^2 + r^2
 
 Squaring was done to get rid of the square roots.
 
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 The claim is that "the sum of the squares of the diagonals equals the sum of the squares of the four sides"
 
 In our parallelogram, the sides are m & n. The diagonals are s & t.
 
 The translation of the claim, into an equation, is this
 m^2 + n^2 + m^2 + n^2 = s^2 + t^2
 which simplifies to
 2m^2 + 2n^2 = s^2 + t^2
 
 If we can prove the equation 2m^2 + 2n^2 = s^2 + t^2 is true, then we have proven the claim to be true.
 
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 The good news is that at this point, that much is trivial. Perform substitutions to get...
 
 2m^2 + 2n^2 = s^2 + t^2
 2p^2 + 2(q^2+r^2) = p^2+2pq+q^2 + r^2 + p^2-2pq+q^2 + r^2
 2p^2 + 2q^2 + 2r^2 = p^2+2pq+q^2 + r^2 + p^2-2pq+q^2 + r^2
 2p^2 + 2q^2 + 2r^2 = p^2+q^2 + r^2 + p^2+q^2 + r^2
 2p^2 + 2q^2 + 2r^2 = 2p^2+2q^2 + 2r^2 ... equation is true
 
 Since the last equation is true for all values of p,q,r, this means 2m^2 + 2n^2 = s^2 + t^2 is true as well
 
 So the claim has been verified and this ends the proof.
 
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