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Triangle Angle Relationships

Triangle Angle Relationships

Triangles are fundamental geometric shapes formed by three straight sides and three angles. Understanding the relationships between these angles and sides is essential for solving complex geometry problems.

The Interior Angle Sum Theorem

The most important rule to remember about triangles is the Interior Angle Sum Theorem. It states that the sum of the three interior angles of any triangle is always exactly 180180^\circ.

If a triangle has angles AA, BB, and CC, the formula is: A+B+C=180\angle A + \angle B + \angle C = 180^\circ

Example: In ABC\triangle ABC, you are given A=50\angle A = 50^\circ and B=70\angle B = 70^\circ. Find C\angle C.

To find C\angle C, subtract the known angles from 180180^\circ: C=180(50+70)\angle C = 180^\circ - (50^\circ + 70^\circ) C=180120=60\angle C = 180^\circ - 120^\circ = 60^\circ

The Exterior Angle Theorem

An exterior angle is formed when you extend one side of a triangle outward. The Exterior Angle Theorem states that the measure of an exterior angle of a triangle is equal to the sum of the measures of its two non-adjacent (opposite) interior angles.

Example: Using the same ABC\triangle ABC where A=50\angle A = 50^\circ and B=70\angle B = 70^\circ, find the exterior angle at CC.

The two non-adjacent interior angles to CC are AA and BB. Exterior C=A+B\text{Exterior } \angle C = \angle A + \angle B Exterior C=50+70=120\text{Exterior } \angle C = 50^\circ + 70^\circ = 120^\circ (Notice that the interior C\angle C (6060^\circ) and the exterior C\angle C (120120^\circ) form a straight line, adding up to 180180^\circ.)

Classifying Triangles

Triangles can be classified in two ways: by their angles and by their side lengths.

Classification by Angles

  • Acute Triangle: All three interior angles are less than 9090^\circ.
  • Right Triangle: Exactly one angle is equal to 9090^\circ (a right angle).
  • Obtuse Triangle: Exactly one angle is greater than 9090^\circ.

Classification by Sides

  • Equilateral Triangle: All three sides are equal in length. As a result, all three angles are also equal (each is exactly 6060^\circ).
  • Isosceles Triangle: Exactly two sides are equal in length. The angles opposite these equal sides (called base angles) are also equal.
  • Scalene Triangle: All three sides have different lengths, meaning all three angles are also different.

Example: Classify a triangle with side lengths of 55, 55, and 88.

Because exactly two sides are equal (55 and 55), this is an isosceles triangle.