McGraw Hill Integrated II, 2012
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McGraw Hill Integrated II, 2012 View details
6. Trapezoids and Kites
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Exercise 14 Page 526

A trapezoid is isosceles if its non-parallel sides are congruent.

QRST is an isosceles trapezoid.

Practice makes perfect

Let's begin by plotting the given vertices and drawing the quadrilateral on a coordinate plane.

First we will verify that it is a trapezoid, and then we will determine whether the figure is an isosceles trapezoid.

Is It a Trapezoid?

To determine if our quadrilateral is a trapezoid, we have to check if our quadrilateral has exactly one pair of parallel sides. To do this, let's find the slope of each side using the Slope Formula.

Side Slope Formula Simplified
Slope of SR: ( -1,-6), ( -2,1) 1-( -6)/-2-( -1) - 7
Slope of RQ: ( -2,1), ( 2, 5) 5- 1/2-( -2) 1
Slope of QT: ( 2,5), ( 9,4) 4- 5/9- 2 - 1/7
Slope of TS: ( 9,4), ( -1,-6) -6- 4/-1- 9 1

We can see that the slopes of SR and QT are not equal, so these sides are not parallel. The slopes of RQ and TS are equal, so these sides are parallel. Since our quadrilateral has exactly one pair of parallel sides, it is a trapezoid.

Is It an Isosceles Trapezoid?

A trapezoid is isosceles if its non-parallel sides are congruent. Therefore, we want to check whether the lengths of SR and QT are equal. To do this, we will use the Distance Formula.

Side Distance Formula Simplified
Length of SR: ( -1,-6), ( -2,1) sqrt(( - 2-( -1))^2+( 1-( -6))^2) sqrt(50)
Length of QT: ( 2,5), ( 9,4) sqrt(( 9- 2)^2+( 4- 5)^2) sqrt(50)

Since the lengths are equal, SR and QT are congruent. Therefore, QRST is an isosceles trapezoid.