In the figure,$ABCD$ is a parallelogram and $BC$ is produced to a point $Q$ such that $AD = CQ$. If $AQ$ intersects $DC$ at $P$,show that $\operatorname{ar}(BPC) = \operatorname{ar}(DPQ)$. [Hint: Join $AC$.]

Vedclass pdf generator app on play store
Vedclass iOS app on app store
(N/A) We have a parallelogram $ABCD$ and $AD = CQ$.
Let us join $AC$. We know that triangles on the same base and between the same parallels are equal in area.
Since $\Delta ADC$ and $\Delta ABC$ are on the same base $AC$ and between the same parallels $AB$ and $DC$,we have $\operatorname{ar}(\Delta ADC) = \operatorname{ar}(\Delta ABC)$.
Also,since $AD \parallel BQ$ and $AD = CQ$,we consider $\Delta ADC$ and $\Delta QDC$. However,a more direct approach is to use the property that triangles on the same base and between the same parallels are equal in area.
Consider $\Delta ADC$ and $\Delta ACQ$. Since $AD \parallel BQ$ (as $AD \parallel BC$),$\Delta ADC$ and $\Delta ACQ$ are between the same parallels $AD$ and $BQ$. But they do not share the same base.
Let us use the property: $\operatorname{ar}(\Delta ADC) = \operatorname{ar}(\Delta ABC)$.
Adding $\operatorname{ar}(\Delta APC)$ to both sides is not helpful. Instead,consider $\Delta ADQ$ and $\Delta ACQ$. Since $AD \parallel QC$,$\operatorname{ar}(\Delta ADQ) = \operatorname{ar}(\Delta ADC)$.
Actually,the standard proof is:
$1$. $\operatorname{ar}(\Delta ADC) = \operatorname{ar}(\Delta ABC)$ (Triangles on same base $AC$ and between parallels $AB \parallel DC$)
$2$. Since $AD \parallel BQ$,$\operatorname{ar}(\Delta ADQ) = \operatorname{ar}(\Delta ACQ)$ (Triangles on same base $AQ$ and between parallels $AD \parallel BQ$ is not correct here).
Correct approach:
Since $AD \parallel BQ$,$\operatorname{ar}(\Delta ADQ) = \operatorname{ar}(\Delta ACQ)$ is false.
Correct logic: $\operatorname{ar}(\Delta ADC) = \operatorname{ar}(\Delta ACQ)$ is false.
Let's use: $\operatorname{ar}(\Delta ADQ) = \operatorname{ar}(\Delta ACQ)$ is not true.
Actually,$\operatorname{ar}(\Delta ADQ) = \operatorname{ar}(\Delta ACQ)$ is true if $AD \parallel QC$. Yes,$AD \parallel BC$,so $AD \parallel QC$. Thus,$\operatorname{ar}(\Delta ADQ) = \operatorname{ar}(\Delta ACQ)$.
Subtracting $\operatorname{ar}(\Delta APD)$ from both sides:
$\operatorname{ar}(\Delta ADQ) - \operatorname{ar}(\Delta APD) = \operatorname{ar}(\Delta ACQ) - \operatorname{ar}(\Delta APD)$
$\operatorname{ar}(\Delta DPQ) = \operatorname{ar}(\Delta APC)$
Since $\operatorname{ar}(\Delta APC) = \operatorname{ar}(\Delta BPC)$ (triangles on same base $PC$ and between parallels $AB \parallel DC$),
Therefore,$\operatorname{ar}(\Delta DPQ) = \operatorname{ar}(\Delta BPC)$.

Explore More

Similar Questions

Diagonals $AC$ and $BD$ of a quadrilateral $ABCD$ intersect at $O$ in such a way that $\operatorname{ar}(AOD) = \operatorname{ar}(BOC)$. Prove that $ABCD$ is a trapezium.

Diagonals $AC$ and $BD$ of a trapezium $ABCD$ with $AB || DC$ intersect each other at $O$. Prove that $ar(AOD) = ar(BOC).$

Show that a median of a triangle divides it into two triangles of equal areas.

$A$ farmer has a field in the form of a parallelogram $PQRS$. She took any point $A$ on $RS$ and joined it to points $P$ and $Q$. In how many parts is the field divided? What are the shapes of these parts? The farmer wants to sow wheat and pulses in equal portions of the field separately. How should she do it?

$D, E$ and $F$ are respectively the mid-points of the sides $BC, CA$ and $AB$ of a $\Delta ABC$. Show that $\operatorname{ar}(DEF) = \frac{1}{4} \operatorname{ar}(ABC)$.

Vedclass Products

For Students

Vedclass Test Series

Mock tests in real JEE/NEET style with performance analysis. 5-day free trial.

Start Free Trial
For Teachers

Exam Paper Generator

Generate Set A/B/C/D exam papers from 7.5L+ questions in 2 minutes. 3 chapters free.

Try Free
For Institutes

Online Exam Module

Live online exams with unlimited students, 360° analytics & white-label branding.

See Demo