Want this question answered?
Exactly one unique triangle exists with the given side lengths.thank u...
Do you mean you know the lengths of the sides but you don't know the size of any of the angles ? If that's the situation, then yes. The lengths of the sides tell you everything about the triangle, and they define one and only one unique triangle. With a little bit of trig, you can figure out what the size of each angle has to be.
Every triangle is unique, so this question cannot have a serious answer.
Yes, the sides are lengths and those are positive. Even a degenerate triangle which is 3 collinear points joined by line segments has positive sides. (it's angles add up to 180 and its area is zero, by the way but the usual triangle lies in a unique plane while the degenerate one does not)
Nothing. It is always possible to make a duplicate triangle.
More than one unique triangle exist
Exactly one unique triangle exists with the given side lengths.thank u...
Do you mean you know the lengths of the sides but you don't know the size of any of the angles ? If that's the situation, then yes. The lengths of the sides tell you everything about the triangle, and they define one and only one unique triangle. With a little bit of trig, you can figure out what the size of each angle has to be.
More than one unique triangle exists with the given side lengths.
No, it does not make a unique triangle since the 70 degree angle could be at the end of the 3 ft side or the 4 foot side.
Every triangle is unique, so this question cannot have a serious answer.
Yes, the sides are lengths and those are positive. Even a degenerate triangle which is 3 collinear points joined by line segments has positive sides. (it's angles add up to 180 and its area is zero, by the way but the usual triangle lies in a unique plane while the degenerate one does not)
Nothing. It is always possible to make a duplicate triangle.
Isolate planets of the solar system and explain their unique characteristics.
It is a rigid 2-dimensional shape.
Three non-collinear points do not determine a unique spherical triangle.
From the given dimensions no kind of triangle is possible.