About the Kite Shape
What Is a Kite?
A kite is a quadrilateral with two pairs of adjacent sides that are equal in length. Unlike a parallelogram, the equal sides are adjacent rather than opposite. The diagonals of a kite always intersect at right angles, with one diagonal bisecting the other.
Area Formula
The area of a kite is calculated as A = (d1 x d2)/2, where d1 and d2 are the lengths of the two diagonals. This formula works because the diagonals are perpendicular, creating four right triangles whose areas sum to the total.
Properties
A kite has one axis of symmetry along the longer diagonal. The diagonals are perpendicular, and the longer diagonal bisects the shorter one. One pair of opposite angles are equal. If all four sides are equal, the kite is also a rhombus.
Applications
Kite shapes appear in actual kites (the flying toy), architectural details, quilting patterns, and geometric constructions. The perpendicular diagonal property makes kites useful in structural design where right-angle bracing is needed.