Finding the Centroid of a Composite Shape

Introduction

Have you ever wondered how engineers and architects determine the balance point of irregular objects? Whether designing bridges, robots, or even everyday household items, knowing where the centroid lies is essential. In this WebQuest, you will investigate how to estimate the centroid of complex shapes by breaking them down into simpler geometric figures. Through exploration, computation, and teamwork, you will learn how mathematics helps us understand the physical world.

Task

Your task is to estimate the centroid of a composite shape created using at least three basic shapes (triangles, rectangles, circles, semi‑circles, quarter‑circles, ellipses, etc.).

You will:

  1. Construct your own composite shape (digital or hand‑drawn).
  2. Decompose it into simple geometric parts.
  3. Compute the centroid of each part.
  4. Combine the results to estimate the centroid of the entire shape.
  5. Present your findings in a short report or slide presentation that includes:
    • A labeled drawing of the composite shape
    • Decomposed parts with coordinates
    • Computations
    • Final estimated centroid
    • Brief reflection on accuracy and difficulty
Process

Step 1: Learn the Concept

Review how centroids of simple shapes are determined. Use the resources provided below.

Step 2: Create Your Composite Shape

Design a shape made of:

  • At least three basic shapes
  • Shapes must touch or overlap logically
  • Choose a coordinate origin for reference

Step 3: Decompose the Shape

Break your composite figure into its individual components.

Label each shape clearly (e.g., Shape A, Shape B, Shape C).

Step 4: Compute Component Centroids

For each individual part:

  • Identify centroid coordinates (xᵢ, yᵢ)
  • Determine the area (Aᵢ)

Step 5: Compute Composite Centroid

Use the formula: ∑Aixi/∑Ai and ∑Aiyi/∑Ai

Step 6: Create Your Output

Your final presentation must include:

  • The full composite diagram
  • Decomposed shapes
  • Calculation table
  • Final centroid highlighted
  • Reflection (What was challenging? What did you learn?)

Step 7: Submit and Share

Submit the link to your WebQuest and share your findings during class.

Resources

Centroid Formulas for Basic Shapes

  1. Rectangles – centroid at center
  2. Triangles – centroid at average of vertices
  3. Circles – centroid at center
  4. Semi‑circles – centroid located at 4r3π\frac{4r}{3\pi}3π4r​ from the flat side
  5. Quarter circles – centroid at 4r3π\frac{4r}{3\pi}3π4r​ in both directions
  6. Ellipses – centroid at center

Helpful Websites

Optional Tools

  • GeoGebra
  • Desmos Geometry
  • Graph paper PDF generators
  • Online centroid calculators (for checking only)
Evaluation

Criteria

Excellent (4)

Good (3)

Fair (2)

Needs Improvement (1)

Composite Shape Design

Creative, clear, uses 3 or more shapes

Clear, uses at least 3 shapes

Uses only 2 shapes

Shape unclear or minimal

Decomposition

All parts labeled and logical

Mostly logical with minor issues

Some parts missing

Incorrect or unclear

Calculations

Accurate, complete, well-organized

Mostly accurate with few errors

Several errors present

Little to no correct computation

Final Centroid

Accurate and clearly shown

Mostly correct

Some inaccuracies

Missing or incorrect

Presentation

Clear, neat, well explained

Understandable

Lacks clarity or detail

Incomplete

Reflection

Insightful and thoughtful

Adequate

Minimal

Missing

 

 

Conclusion

By completing this WebQuest, you have explored how engineers and designers break down complex shapes in order to analyze them mathematically. Estimating the centroid of a composite shape requires understanding area, geometry, and precision in computation. Reflect on your method and consider how changing the shape or decomposition might affect your results. The ability to deconstruct a complex problem into manageable parts is a powerful mathematical skill you will use across many subjects.