Same shape, different size — that's similarity, and it lets you measure a tower from its shadow. Drag a line across a triangle and watch the proportions stay locked.
Play with it
Drag the line DE up and down — it stays parallel to the base BC. No matter where it sits, AD/DB = AE/EC. That's the Basic Proportionality Theorem.
Learn
Two figures are similar (written A ∼ B) if they have the same shape — even if their sizes differ. Photos enlarged, maps, and scale models are all similar to the original.
Two triangles are similar when both conditions hold:
Congruent = same shape AND size (ratio 1). Similar = same shape, any size. Every congruent pair is also similar.
You don't need to check every angle and side. Any one of these is enough:
△ABC ∼ △DEF with ∠A = 50° and ∠B = 60°. Find ∠F.
The star theorem of this chapter:
A line drawn parallel to one side of a triangle divides the other two sides in the same ratio. The converse is also true: if a line divides two sides in the same ratio, it must be parallel to the third side.
In △ABC, DE ∥ BC with AD = 2 cm, DB = 3 cm and AE = 4 cm. Find EC.
Why this matters
Similar triangles let you measure things you can't reach — the height of a tower, the width of a river — using only a shadow or a ruler. Surveyors, architects and photographers rely on it daily.
Resize a photo, a logo or a building plan and every length grows by the same scale factor while the angles stay fixed — that's similarity. Get the scale factor wrong on one side and the image looks stretched. Designers and architects keep figures similar so nothing warps.
Scale factorA stick and a tower in the same sunlight cast shadows that form similar triangles — the sun's rays hit both at the same angle. So height ÷ shadow is the same for both: 2/3 = h/30 → the tower is 20 m tall. No ladder required.
Indirect measurementEvery map is a similar, scaled-down copy of the land — the scale is the ratio of similitude.
A lens forms a similar image; object and image triangles share the same ratios.
Surveyors find an unreachable width by building a similar triangle on the near bank.
Maps, cameras, surveying and more — each explained with a diagram. Free to unlock.
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Modelled on CBSE's competency pattern — MCQ, assertion–reason and case-study items.
Interactive visualiser hand-built for trykarkedekho. Content from the rationalised NCERT Class 10 Maths syllabus (ncert.nic.in).
Buffyyour study buddyBuffy is an AI helper and can be wrong — always check your NCERT textbook.