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.
A driver of a car travelling at \(52\) \(km \;h^{–1}\) applies the brakes Shade the area on the graph that represents the distance travelled by the car during the period.
Which part of the graph represents uniform motion of the car?