The Pythagorean Hexagon — Proof and Definition

The Pythagorean Hexagon — Proof and Definition
© Tiago Hands — 18 October 2025 (UTC +8)


Definition and Construction

Six points A, B, C, D, E and F form a hexagon whose sides are all equal in length.
Point G lies at the centre of a circle with radius AB = x > 0.
Points F, B and D lie on the circumference of this circle, forming a right-angled triangle at G where angle FGB = 90°.

Quadrilateral ABGF forms a square.
Quadrilaterals FGDE and BCDG form rhombuses that share the same side length x.
The internal angles satisfy α + β = 270°.

Each figure has a centre:
H for square ABGF, I for rhombus BCDG, and J for rhombus FGDE.
When these three figures are joined edge-to-edge around the circle, their areas obey a Pythagorean relation.


The Pythagorean Hexagon



Areas of the Component Figures

Let AB = x.

Square ABGF: A1 = x2
Rhombus FGDE: A2 = 2x2cos(β/2)sin(β/2) = x2sin(β)
Rhombus BCDG: A3 = 2x2cos(α/2)sin(α/2) = x2sin(α)


Algebraic and Trigonometric Proof

We aim to show A22 + A32 = A12.

Substituting:
(x2sin(β))2 + (x2sin(α))2 = x4(sin2(β) + sin2(α))

Since α + β = 270°, α = 270° − β, and sin(270° − β) = −cos(β),
we obtain x4(sin2(β) + cos2(β)) = x4.

Hence, A22 + A32 = A12.


Geometric Implication

The areas satisfy the Pythagorean relation:
A12 = A22 + A32,
where A1 is the area of square ABGF, A2 is the area of rhombus FGDE, and A3 is the area of rhombus BCDG.


End of Proof

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Understanding Heuristics: A Practical Guide to Smarter Problem Solving

The Pythagram Defined

The Unicursal Pythagram