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The diagonals of a rhombus are perpendicular to each other. Hence, by joining the midpoints of each side, a rectangle can be produced. One of the five 2D lattice types is the rhombic lattice, also called centered rectangular lattice. Adjacent angles of a rhombus are supplementary.
Proof that the diagonals are perpendicular
<math>\overrightarrow{AC} = \overrightarrow{AB} + \overrightarrow{BC}</math> <math>\overrightarrow{BD} = \overrightarrow{BC}+ \overrightarrow{CD}= \overrightarrow{BC}- \overrightarrow{AB}</math>. The last equality comes from the parallelism of CD and AB. Taking the inner product,
<\overrightarrow{AC}, \overrightarrow{BD}> = <\overrightarrow{AB} + \overrightarrow{BC}, \overrightarrow{BC} - \overrightarrow{AB}></math>
since the norms of AB and BC are equal and since the inner product is bilinear and symmetric. The inner product of the diagonals is zero if and only if they are perpendicular. AreaThe area of any rhombus is one half the product of the lengths of its diagonals:
OriginThe origin of the word rhombus is from the Greek word for something that spins. Euclid uses the word ρομβος; and in his translation Heath says it is apparently drawn from the Greek word ρεμβω, to turn round and round. He also points out that Archimedes used the term solid rhombus for two right circular cones sharing a common base. For more on the origin of the word, see rhombus at the MathWords web page.
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