Is it possible to find the area of a trapezoid when given the lengths of the four sides but without knowing which of the sides are parallel?

1 Answer
Feb 29, 2016

No. Trapezoid with all four sides of known length is not a rigid geometrical figure, there are infinite number of trapezoids with the same lengths of corresponding sides, all with different areas.

Explanation:

Imagine a trapezoid made of four planks connected by hinges, so these planks can move on these hinges. Two parallel planks will be bases (top and bottom) and two other planks will be sides (left and right).

Let's take the left side plank and rotate it clockwise a little. Obviously, we will distort the parallelism between two base planks that used to be parallel.

To restore the parallelism, take the right side plank and rotate it clockwise until two base planks, that used to be parallel in the beginning and then lost this parallelism after the rotation of the left side planks, become parallel again.

The resulting trapezoid will have the same bases but different distance between them (the altitude or height of the trapezoid). Hence, the area will be different from what it was initially.

Therefore, just the length of all four sides of a trapezoid is not sufficient to determine its area.