Exercise 1:
Show (with the help of GeoGebra) that a triangle is equilateral if and only if its centroid, orthocenter and circumcenter are the same point. In case the triangle is equilateral, the centroid, the orthocenter, and the circumcenter all lie on one point.
Exercise 2:
Let's find the point P within a triangle ABC, so that if we draw lines from P to the three vertices, we get three equal (area) triangles. Is this P perhaps a different center of the triangle, from those mentioned in chapter 1?
Exercise 3:
In triangle ABC, the angle bisector of A meets the altitude from B, and the median from C in one point P. Does the triangle have to be equilateral? If not, give an example that is not an equilateral triangle.
Exercise 4:
Show (with the help of GeoGebra) that the circumcenter of a given triangle is the orthocenter of the triangle formed by joining the midpoints of the sides of the original triangle ABC.
exercise