Midpoint Formula
The midpoint M between P₁(x₁,y₁) and P₂(x₂,y₂) is the average of coordinates: M = ((x₁+x₂)/2, (y₁+y₂)/2). Extends to 3D. Section formula divides a segment in any ratio m₁:m₂. Endpoint from midpoint: P₂ = 2M − P₁.
Why This Mathematical Concept Matters
Why: Midpoint formulas are essential in GIS, mapping, construction, and physics. The midpoint bisects the segment — equidistant from both endpoints. Section formula finds center of mass and weighted divisions.
How: 2D: M = ((x₁+x₂)/2, (y₁+y₂)/2). 3D: add (z₁+z₂)/2. Section (ratio m₁:m₂): P = ((m₂x₁+m₁x₂)/(m₁+m₂), (m₂y₁+m₁y₂)/(m₁+m₂)). Endpoint: P₂ = 2M − P₁ when M is midpoint of P₁P₂.
- ●The midpoint is equidistant from both endpoints — it bisects the segment.
- ●Distance from P₁ to M equals distance from M to P₂ — both are half the total.
- ●Weighted midpoint (section formula) divides a segment in any ratio, not just 1:1.
📍 Examples — Click to Load
Point 1 (x₁, y₁) and Point 2 (x₂, y₂)
Midpoint Coordinates
Distance Halves (P₁→M vs M→P₂)
📐 Calculation Steps
- Given: P₁(2, 3, 0) and P₂(8, 7, 0)
- Midpoint formula: M = ((x₁+x₂)/2, (y₁+y₂)/2, (z₁+z₂)/2)
- x = (2 + 8) / 2 = 5
- y = (3 + 7) / 2 = 5
- z = (0 + 0) / 2 = 0
⚠️For educational and informational purposes only. Verify with a qualified professional.
🧮 Fascinating Math Facts
GIS software uses midpoint formulas to find geographic centers between two locations.
— Geographic Information Systems
Center of mass of two equal point masses is their midpoint.
— Physics
📋 Key Takeaways
- • Midpoint M = ((x₁+x₂)/2, (y₁+y₂)/2) — the average of coordinates
- • 3D: M = ((x₁+x₂)/2, (y₁+y₂)/2, (z₁+z₂)/2)
- • Section formula: Point dividing in ratio m₁:m₂ is ((m₂x₁+m₁x₂)/(m₁+m₂), (m₂y₁+m₁y₂)/(m₁+m₂))
- • Endpoint from midpoint: P₂ = 2M − P₁ when M is midpoint of P₁P₂
- • Applications: GIS, mapping, construction, center of mass
💡 Did You Know?
📖 Midpoint as Average
The midpoint is simply the average of the x-coordinates and the average of the y-coordinates. For (2,3) and (8,7): M = ((2+8)/2, (3+7)/2) = (5, 5). The midpoint lies exactly halfway between the two points.
Connection to Distance
The distance from P₁ to M equals the distance from M to P₂. Both equal half of d(P₁,P₂) = √[(x₂−x₁)² + (y₂−y₁)²].
📐 Section Formula
To find a point P that divides the segment P₁P₂ in the ratio m₁:m₂ (from P₁ toward P₂):
P = ((m₂x₁ + m₁x₂)/(m₁+m₂), (m₂y₁ + m₁y₂)/(m₁+m₂))
When m₁ = m₂ = 1, this reduces to the midpoint formula. For ratio 2:3, the point is 2/5 of the way from P₁ to P₂.
❓ FAQ
What is the midpoint formula?
M = ((x₁+x₂)/2, (y₁+y₂)/2). The midpoint is the average of the coordinates of the two endpoints.
How do I find the endpoint if I know the midpoint?
Use P₂ = 2M − P₁. If M is the midpoint of P₁P₂, then M = (P₁+P₂)/2, so P₂ = 2M − P₁.
What is the section formula?
The point dividing P₁P₂ in ratio m₁:m₂ is ((m₂x₁+m₁x₂)/(m₁+m₂), (m₂y₁+m₁y₂)/(m₁+m₂)).
How does this relate to the distance formula?
The midpoint is equidistant from both endpoints. Distance from each endpoint to midpoint = half the total distance.
Can I use this in 3D?
Yes. M = ((x₁+x₂)/2, (y₁+y₂)/2, (z₁+z₂)/2). Same idea — average each coordinate.
🗺️ GIS and Mapping
GIS uses midpoint formulas for geographic centers. For flat projections (UTM), the formula works directly. Example: (-122, 37) and (-74, 40) → midpoint approx (-98, 38.5). Construction uses midpoints for beam centers and symmetry axes.
📐 Quick Reference
📝 Practice Checklist
Before calculating, verify:
- You have both endpoint coordinates (or midpoint + one endpoint for endpoint mode)
- For weighted mode, ratio m₁:m₂ is positive
- Units are consistent (same for x, y, z)
⚠️ Disclaimer: This calculator uses flat Euclidean geometry. For geographic coordinates on Earth, curvature affects true midpoint — use geodesic methods for long distances. Educational use only.