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8.02 Area of triangles

Lesson

There are several different ways in which we can find the area of a triangle. The situation and the information we are presented with will determine which formula we will use.

Base and perpendicular height

When the base ($b$b) and perpendicular height ($h$h) are known then we can use the familiar formula, half base times height.

Area of a triangle when base and height are known

$A=\frac{1}{2}bh$A=12bh

Where $b$bis the length of the base and $h$h is the perpendicular height. 

 

Practice questions

question 1

Find the area of the triangle shown.

Two sides and the included angle

 

When we are using the lengths of 2 sides ($a$a and $b$b) and the angle between them $C$C.  

$\text{Area }=\frac{1}{2}\times\text{Side 1 }\times\text{Side 2 }\times\sin\theta$Area =12×Side 1 ×Side 2 ×sinθ.  

It really doesn't matter what you call the sides as long as you have two sides and the included angle. It's worth noting that we often label the sides with lower case letters, and the angles directly opposite the sides with a capital of the same letter. The formula is most commonly written as follows:  

Area rule (when the length of two sides and the included angle is known)

$Area=\frac{1}{2}ab\sin C$Area=12absinC

Where $a$a and $b$b are the known side lengths, and $C$C is the given angle between them, as per the diagram above.

Practice questions

Question 2

Calculate the area of the following triangle.

Round your answer to two decimal places.

A triangle is depicted with the measurements of its two sides and their included angle. The included angle, highlighted by a blue-shaded arc, measures $44^\circ$44° and is adjacent to sides measuring $3$3 m and $5.7$5.7 m.

Question 3

Calculate the area of the following triangle.

Round your answer to the nearest square centimetre.

A non-right-angled triangle with vertices labeled $P$P, $Q$Q, and $R$R. Angle $QPR$QPR measures 39 degrees, while angle $PQR$PQR measures 25 degrees. Side $QR$QR, which is opposite angle $QPR$QPR measures 33 $cm$cm. Side $PR$PR, which is opposite angle $PQR$PQR measures 22 $cm$cm.

All three sides

When we know the length of all three sides of the triangle we can use Heron's Formula to calculate the area. Heron's Formula requires you to know the lengths of all 3 sides, (no perpendicular heights or angles necessary).  

Heron's formula

 

$A=\sqrt{s(s-a)(s-b)(s-c)}$A=s(sa)(sb)(sc), where s is known as the semiperimeter of the triangle and is calculated using $s=\frac{a+b+c}{2}$s=a+b+c2

 

Worked example

Use Heron's formula to find the area of triangle $ABC$ABC, if $AB=3,BC=2$AB=3,BC=2 and $CA=4$CA=4

First we need to identify $s$s, the semiperimeter, which is $s=\frac{a+b+c}{2}=\frac{2+4+3}{2}=4.5$s=a+b+c2=2+4+32=4.5

Now we can use Heron's Formula

$A$A $=$= $\sqrt{s(s-a)(s-b)(s-c)}$s(sa)(sb)(sc)
$A$A $=$= $\sqrt{4.5(4.5-2)(4.5-4)(4.5-3)}$4.5(4.52)(4.54)(4.53)
$A$A $=$= $\sqrt{4.5(2.5)(0.5)(1.5)}$4.5(2.5)(0.5)(1.5)
$A$A $=$= $2.9$2.9 (to 1dp)

So the area of the triangle is $2.9$2.9 square units.

Practice questions

question 4

Find the area of the triangle.

 

When the area is known

When the area of the triangle is known, we can use algebra and inverse operations to find unknown side lengths or angles.

Practice questions

question 5

$\triangle ABC$ABC has an area of $520$520 cm2. The side $BC=48$BC=48 cm and $\angle ACB=35^\circ$ACB=35°.

What is the length of $b$b?

Round your answer to the nearest centimetre.

Given $\triangle ABC$ABC with length of side $AC$AC labeled as $b$b cm and side $BC$BC labeled as $48$48 cm and their interior $\angle ACB$ACB that measures $35$35º. $\angle ACB$ACB is an included angle of the two given sides. Both side AC and BC are adjacent to the given included angle. 

question 6

We want to find the area of a trapezium with parallel sides of length $19$19 cm and $28$28 cm, and non-parallel sides of length $10$10 cm and $17$17 cm.

  1. We want to break this trapezium up into a parallelogram and a triangle, where the parallelogram has sides of length $10$10 cm and $19$19 cm.

    Find the area of the triangle.

  2. Hence solve for $h$h, the height (in centimetres) of the trapezium.

  3. Hence find the area of the trapezium.

Outcomes

2.2.2

determine the area of a triangle, given two sides and an included angle by using the rule area = 1/2 absinC, or given three sides by using Heron’s rule, and solve related practical problems

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