Yes
yes
The angle is 45 degrees.
Yes, an angle can have the same measure as its complement, but only if it measures 45 degrees. The complement of an angle ( A ) is defined as ( 90^\circ - A ). Setting these equal gives ( A = 90^\circ - A ), leading to ( 2A = 90^\circ ), which simplifies to ( A = 45^\circ ). Thus, the only angle that is equal to its complement is 45 degrees.
45˚
The complement is 60 degrees.
Assuming two angles are complementary, an angle can have the same measure as it's complement when it measures 45 degrees. BECAUSE 45 +45 =90!!
To be both a complement and a supplement at the same time there can be no angle. However: The angle 45° is self-complementary since 45° + 45° = 90° The angle 90° is self-supplementary since 90° + 90° = 180°
The complement of an acute angle A is the angle 90° - A. The complement of 13° is 77°.
Since the sum of the two complement angles is 90⁰ , then the complement of a 60⁰ angle is a 30⁰ angle.
A complement angle is the angle that, when added to a given angle, equals 90 degrees. For a 75-degree angle, the complement can be found by subtracting 75 from 90. Therefore, the complement angle for 75 degrees is 15 degrees.
Any angle less than 90o will have a complement.
No. An angle is (90 minus its complement) degrees. The definition of the complement is "90 degrees minus the original angle".