Stage 12 · Inequalities

12.6  The Basic Inequality

Two ways to average two positive numbers — and why the gap between them unlocks "largest" and "smallest."

For ages 15–17 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 2 of 4 in this lesson: 12.6.2 The geometric picture: a semicircle never lies

12.6.2 The geometric picture: a semicircle never lies

Algebra tells you the inequality is true. A picture tells you why you should have believed it all along. Draw a half-circle sitting on a flat line, and split the diameter into two pieces of length a and b. The diameter is then a + b, so the radius is exactly (a + b)/2 — the arithmetic mean, hiding in plain sight.

Now stand a vertical line straight up from the split point until it hits the curve. That half-chord has a famous length: in a semicircle, the height raised at the split point is the geometric mean of the two pieces — exactly √(ab). (It's the same fact as: the altitude to the hypotenuse of a right triangle is the geometric mean of the two segments it makes.)

a b √(ab) (a+b)/2 a slanted radius (amber) is the longest segment from center to curve — the upright green chord can only be shorter, or equal at the center
The green upright is a vertical leg; the amber radius is the slant from the center to the same point on the curve. A leg of a right triangle is never longer than the hypotenuse, so √(ab)(a + b)/2. They tie only when the split is at the center.

Here is the punch line. Every point on the curve is exactly one radius from the center, so the slanted segment from the center out to the top of our upright is a full radius — length (a + b)/2. The green upright is just the vertical leg of the little right triangle whose hypotenuse is that radius. And a leg of a right triangle is never longer than its hypotenuse. So the geometric mean √(ab) can never exceed the radius (a + b)/2 — which is the basic inequality, drawn instead of derived.

Read it off the picture

Radius (a + b)/2 = the slant (the hypotenuse). Half-chord √(ab) = the upright (a leg). Leg ≤ hypotenuse, so √(ab)(a + b)/2. Slide the split toward the center and the upright grows until — only at the center — it stands up as a full radius and the two are equal.

🎮 Try it Drag the split in a semicircle
Slide the split point along the diameter. The amber radius never changes length; the green half-chord grows toward it and reaches it only when the split is dead center.
split
eastmath.com · 12.6 The Basic Inequality · 12.6.2 The geometric picture: a semicircle never lies