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An angle bisector bisects an angle. A perpendicular bisector bisects a side.
I can be. Perpendicular is a "T", with the stem SOMETIMES moved to the left or right. So, yes, a right angle CAN be perpendicular.
Angle
The radius is DE
Draw a perpendicular to that line and extend the arms of the angle to meed the perpendicular drawn earlier. Check if the line is bisecting the perpendicular, if yes, then the line is a bisector of the angle. :)
a direct ray is where the sun light hits the earth at a 90 degree angle so the angle of sunlight is perpendicular to the earths surface
Sunlight is at its strongest when it is at a perpendicular angle; at oblique angles it is weaker.
almost 90, lines are not quite perpendicular.
No but a right angle is a perpendicular
Let's forget about "almost", and just talk about perfectly perpendicular sun, that is, directly over your head. That can happen anywhere in the Tropic Zone ... the belt around the middle of the globe between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn. That's every place with latitude of 23.5 degrees or less, north or south. It happens twice a year at every latitude in the Tropics, and it never happens anywhere else on earth.
An angle bisector bisects an angle. A perpendicular bisector bisects a side.
Draw a perpendicular from the point where the incident ray is reflected and the angle between the perpendicular and reflected ray is the angle of reflection.
I can be. Perpendicular is a "T", with the stem SOMETIMES moved to the left or right. So, yes, a right angle CAN be perpendicular.
Yes it can.
Angle
perpendicular lines always form a right angle
The radius is DE