No, it is not.
The circumcenter is equidistant from each vertex of the triangle.The circumcenter is at the intersection of the perpendicular bisectors of the triangle's sides.The circumcenter of a right triangle falls on the side opposite the right angle.The incenter of a triangle is always inside it.The incenter is where all of the bisectors of the angles of the triangle meet.The incenter is equidistant from each side of the triangle
The circumcenter is equidistant from each vertex of the triangle.The circumcenter is at the intersection of the perpendicular bisectors of the triangle's sides.The circumcenter of a right triangle falls on the side opposite the right angle.The incenter of a triangle is always inside it.The incenter is where all of the bisectors of the angles of the triangle meet.The incenter is equidistant from each side of the triangle
circumcenter circumcenter is wrong, it is the incenterbecause the point of concurrency is always on the inside of the triangle.
always
true
Yes, it is.
When a circle is drawn around a triangle touching each of its 3 vertices the circumcenter of the triangle is found by drawing 3 perpendicular lines at the midpoint of each of its sides and where these lines intersect within the triangle is its circumcenter.Apex: A. The circumcenter is equidistant from each vertex of the triangle. B. The circumcenter is at the intersection of the perpendicular bisectors of the triangle's sides. C. The circumcenter of an obtuse triangle is always outside it.
The circumcenter is always on the midpoint of the hypotenuse when it is in a right triangle.
the circumcenter.
sometimes
The circumcenter of a triangle is equidistant from the vertices of a triangle.
No way! An easy example is the centroid and circumcenter of a right-angle triangle. Circumcenter will be exactly on the middle of the hypotenuse which obviously cannot be the centroid. Centroid is the point where all three lines are connecting all the three vertices and the middle of the line opposite the respective vertex. Circumcenter is the center of the circle passing through all the vertices. As it is known, a right-angle triangle will always fall within a semicircle, meaning the circle center will always be on the middle of the hypotenuse.