Summary: This module covers mathematical distance in preparation for later modules on conic sections.
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The key mathematical formula for discussing all the shapes above is the distance between two points.
Many students are taught, at some point, the “distance formula” as a magic (and very strange-looking) rule. In fact, the distance formula comes directly from a bit of intuition...and the Pythagorean Theorem.
The intuition comes in finding the distance between two points that have one coordinate in common.
The drawing shows the points (2,3) and (6,3). Finding the distance between these points is easy: just count! Take your pen and move it along the paper, starting at (2,3) and moving to the right. Let’s see…one unit gets you over to (3,3); the next unit gets you to (4,3)...a couple more units to (6,3). The distance from (2,3) to (6,3) is 4.
Of course, it would be tedious to count our way from (2,3) to (100,3). But we don’t have to—in fact, you may have already guessed the faster way—we subtract the x coordinates.
And so on. We can write this generalization in words:
This may seem pretty obvious in the examples given above. It’s a little less obvious, but still true, if one of the
The drawing above shows the numbers (-3,1) and (2,1). You can see that the distance between them is 5 (again, by counting). Does our generalization still work? Yes it does, because subtracting a negative number is the same as adding a positive one.
The distance from (-3,1) to (2,1) is
How can we express this generalization mathematically? If two points lie on a horizontal line, they have two different x-coordinates: call them
But there’s one problem left: what if we had chosen
The distance between the points (
You may want to check this generalization with a few specific examples—try both negative and positive values of
So, what if two points have both coordinates different? As an example, consider the distance from (–2,5) to (1,3).
The drawing shows these two points. The (diagonal) line between them has been labeled
The drawing also introduces a third point into the picture, the point (–2,3). The three points define the vertices of a right triangle. Based on our earlier discussion, you can see that the vertical line in this triangle is length
But it is the diagonal line that we want. And we can find that by using the Pythagorean Theorem, which tells us that
If you repeat this process with the generic points (
If
And what about those absolute values we had to put in before? They were used to avoid negative distances. Since the distances in the above formulae are being squared, we no longer need the absolute values to insure that all answers will come out positive.
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