on the perpendicular bisector of the segment.
The term bisector means that bi is the two of something (a cycle with two wheels is a bicycle, for instance). Therefore a bisector will split a segment, area, angle, into two equal parts.
on the perpendicular bisector of the segment.
Equidistant from the endpoints of the segment.
The mid-point
A segment bisector or angle bisector. A bisector can be a line, line segment, or ray.
on the perpendicular bisector of the segment.
No, the definition of a bisector is the point at which a segment is divided into two equal halves. Of course, a segment may be divided further. However, there can be only one bisector of any one segment.
If a point is on the perpendicular bisector of a segment, then it is equidistant, or the same distance, from the endpoints of the segment.
The bisector and the line segment are perpendicular to each other.
In the middle that is where the name bisector comes from.
Biconditional Statement for: Perpendicular Bisector Theorem: A point is equidistant if and only if the point is on the perpendicular bisector of a segment. Converse of the Perpendicular Bisector Theorem: A point is on the perpendicular bisector of the segment if and only if the point is equidistant from the endpoints of a segment.
A Segment Bisector
A perpendicular bisector is a line that divides a given line segment into halves, and is perpendicular to the line segment. An angle bisector is a line that bisects a given angle.
By definition, a segment bisector always created two congruent segments.
A segment need not be a bisector. No theorem can be used to prove something that may not be true!
The term bisector means that bi is the two of something (a cycle with two wheels is a bicycle, for instance). Therefore a bisector will split a segment, area, angle, into two equal parts.