| Square | |
|---|---|
A square is a regular quadrilateral. |
|
| Edges and vertices | 4 |
| Schläfli symbols | {4} t{2} or {}x{} |
| Coxeter–Dynkin diagrams | |
| Symmetry group | Dihedral (D4) |
| Area (with t=edge length) |
t2 |
| Internal angle (degrees) |
90° |
In Euclidean Geometry geometry, a square is a regular polygon with four equal sides. In Euclidean geometry, it has four 90 degree angles. A square with vertices ABCD would be denoted ABCD.
Contents |
A square (regular quadrilateral) is a special case of a rectangle as it has four right angles and equal parallel sides. Likewise it is also a special case of a rhombus, kite, parallelogram, and trapezoid.
The perimeter of a square whose sides have length t is
And the area is
In classical times, the second power was described in terms of the area of a square, as in the above formula. This led to the use of the term square to mean raising to the second power.
The coordinates for the vertices of a square centered at the origin and with side length 2 are (±1, ±1), while the interior of the same consists of all points (x0, x1) with −1 < xi < 1.
Each angle in a square is equal to 90 degrees, or a right angle.
The diagonals of a square are equal. Conversely, if the diagonals of a rhombus are equal, then that rhombus must be a square. The diagonals of a square are
(about 1.41) times the length of a side of the square. This value, known as Pythagoras’ constant, was the first number proven to be irrational.
If a figure is both a rectangle (right angles) and a rhombus (equal edge lengths) then it is a square.
In non-euclidean geometry, squares are more generally polygons with 4 equal sides and equal angles.
In spherical geometry, a square is a polygon whose edges are great circle arcs of equal distance, which meet at equal angles. Unlike the square of plane geometry, the angles of such a square are larger than a right angle.
In hyperbolic geometry, squares with right angles do not exist. Rather, squares in hyperbolic geometry have angles of less than right angles. Larger squares have smaller angles.
Examples:
Six squares can tile the sphere with 3 squares around each vertex and 120 degree internal angles. This is called a spherical cube. The Schläfli symbol is {4,3}. |
Squares can tile the Euclidean plane with 4 around each vertex, with each square having an internal angle of 90 degrees. The Schläfli symbol is {4,4}. |
Squares can tile the hyperbolic plane with 5 around each vertex, with each square having 72 degree internal angles. The Schläfli symbol is {4,5}. |
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