Chord (geometry)

A chord of a circle is a straight line segment whose endpoints both lie on the circle. The infinite line extension of a chord is a secant line, or just secant. More generally, a chord is a line segment joining two points on any curve, for instance, an ellipse. A chord that passes through a circle's center point is the circle's diameter. The word chord is from the Latin chorda meaning bowstring.

The red segment BX is a chord
(as is the diameter segment AB).

In circles

Among properties of chords of a circle are the following:

  1. Chords are equidistant from the center if and only if their lengths are equal.
  2. Equal chords are subtended by equal angles from the center of the circle.
  3. A chord that passes through the center of a circle is called a diameter and is the longest chord.
  4. If the line extensions (secant lines) of chords AB and CD intersect at a point P, then their lengths satisfy AP·PB = CP·PD (power of a point theorem).

In ellipses

The midpoints of a set of parallel chords of an ellipse are collinear.[1]

In trigonometry

Chords were used extensively in the early development of trigonometry. The first known trigonometric table, compiled by Hipparchus, tabulated the value of the chord function for every 7.5 degrees. In the second century AD, Ptolemy of Alexandria compiled a more extensive table of chords in his book on astronomy, giving the value of the chord for angles ranging from 1/2 degree to 180 degrees by increments of half a degree. The circle was of diameter 120, and the chord lengths are accurate to two base-60 digits after the integer part.[2]

The chord function is defined geometrically as shown in the picture. The chord of an angle is the length of the chord between two points on a unit circle separated by that central angle. The angle θ is taken in the positive sense and must lie in the interval 0 < θπ (radian measure). The chord function can be related to the modern sine function, by taking one of the points to be (1,0), and the other point to be (cos θ, sin θ), and then using the Pythagorean theorem to calculate the chord length:[2]

The last step uses the half-angle formula. Much as modern trigonometry is built on the sine function, ancient trigonometry was built on the chord function. Hipparchus is purported to have written a twelve-volume work on chords, all now lost, so presumably a great deal was known about them. In the table below (where is the chord length, and the diameter of the circle) the chord function can be shown to satisfy many identities analogous to well-known modern ones:

NameSine-basedChord-based
Pythagorean
Half-angle
Apothem (a)
Angle (θ)

The inverse function exists as well:[3]

gollark: Fixed.
gollark: ++delete ATS2
gollark: Quite a lot of the time I don't care a massive amount about performance, as long as my thing isn't horrendously slow, because it's serving not very much traffic on a server with quite a lot of free resources.
gollark: Well, it is harder to have to semi-manually manage memory than to have it garbage collected, and it has issues like being stuck in the middle of moving to asynchronous code right now.
gollark: (praise Rust™, although I still find it somewhat harder to write stuff in than JS or whatever so I only use it for my more perf-sensitive projects)

See also

References

  1. Chakerian, G. D. (1979). "7". In Honsberger, R. (ed.). A Distorted View of Geometry. Mathematical Plums. Washington, DC, USA: Mathematical Association of America. p. 147.
  2. Maor, Eli (1998), Trigonometric Delights, Princeton University Press, pp. 25–27, ISBN 978-0-691-15820-4
  3. Simpson, David G. (2001-11-08). "AUXTRIG" (FORTRAN-90 source code). Greenbelt, Maryland, USA: NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. Retrieved 2015-10-26.

Further reading

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