This is not possible for a normal regular polygon. (A regular polygon has all equal angles and all equal sides. A normal polygon has no intersecting edges.)
The smallest regular polygon is an equilateral triangle (a three sided polygon), whose exterior angle measure is twice the measure of its interior angle. A four-sided polygon (a square) has equal interior and exterior angle measures of 90⁰. Starting from a five-sided polygon, the exterior angle measure is smaller than the interior angle measure.
Let's assume that the given information is true. So we need to verify it.
Let's say that the interior angle of the regular polygon has a measure of x degrees, and the measure of the exterior angle of that polygon is 4x degrees.
Since the sum of the interior and the exterior angles of the polygon is 180 degrees (a straight line), the interior angle is 36 degrees.
4x + x = 180
5x = 180
5x/5 = 180/5
x = 36
The sum of the angles of a polygon = 180⁰(n - 2), where n is the number of the sides of the polygon.
The measure of one of the angles of a polygon = 180⁰(n - 2)/n. Substituting the angle measure of 36⁰ into this formula, we have:
36⁰ = 180⁰(n - 2)/n (multiply by n to both sides)
36⁰n = 180⁰(n - 2)
36⁰n = 180⁰n - 360⁰ (add 360⁰ and subtract 36⁰n to both sides)
360⁰ = 144⁰n (divide by 144⁰ to both sides)
2.5 = n !!
That means that a such normal polygon does not exist.
Interior angle 156 degrees Exterior angle 24 degrees 360/24 = 15 sides
It has 32 sides and each interior angle measures 168.75 degrees and so 180-168.75 = 11.25 degrees which is the measure of each exterior angle
The measure of an interior angle in degrees of a regular polygon of n sides is given by the formula: 180 x (n-2) / nSubstituting with n=15, then the answer is thatthe interior angle = 12x13 =156The measure of an exterior angle in degrees of a regular polygon of n sides is given by the formula: 360/nSubstituting with n= 15, then the answer is that the exterior angle = 24
180 - interior angle = exterior angle
The largest exterior angle measure is 120o. It is the exterior measure of an equilateral triangle (which is a regular polygon).
Very rarely.
The interior angle of a polygon and its adjacent exterior angle can never be complementary.
Ah...
An interior or exterior angle of the polygon.
No, they are supplementary, not complementary.
In a polygon there are no such angles.
No. The interior angle and exterior angle at the same vertex are supplementary. Each of them is (180 degrees minus the other). In rectangles (including squares), the interior and exterior angles at each vertex are both right angles.
The sum of an adjacent interior and its exterior angle will total to 360°. If the angles were to be equal, they would both have to be 180°. An angle of 180° is a straight line. A polygon may be composed of straight lines that intersect at vertices but a straight line has no vertex. That being the case, the answer to your question is "No".
equal to 180°
With a protractor or if you know the exterior angle then it's 180 - exterior angle = interior angle
Measure them with a protractor
Interior angles are angles formed by two adjacent sides on the inside of a polygon. An exterior angle is the supplement of the interior angle.