ABCD is a rectangle and P, Q, R and S are mid-points of the sides AB, BC, CD and DA respectively. Show that the quadrilateral PQRS is a rhombus.
Let us join AC and BD.
In ∆ABC,
P and Q are the mid-points of AB and BC respectively
∠PQ || AC and \(\frac{1}{2}\) PQ = AC (Mid-point theorem) ... (1)
Similarly in
∆ADC,
SR || AC and SR = \(\frac{1}{2}\) AC (Mid-point theorem) ... (2)
Clearly, PQ || SR and PQ = SR
Since in quadrilateral PQRS, one pair of opposite sides is equal and parallel to each other,
Hence, it is a parallelogram.
∠PS || QR and PS = QR (Opposite sides of parallelogram)... (3)
In ∆BCD, Q and R are the mid-points of side BC and CD respectively.
∠QR || BD and QR = \(\frac{1}{2}\) BD (Mid-point theorem) ... (4)
However, the diagonals of a rectangle are equal.
AC = BD …(5) By using equation (1), (2), (3), (4), and (5), we obtain
PQ = QR = SR = PS
Therefore, PQRS is a rhombus.
In Fig. 9.26, A, B, C and D are four points on a circle. AC and BD intersect at a point E such that ∠ BEC = 130° and ∠ ECD = 20°. Find ∠ BAC.