The angle between any two medians, in the same context is 120 degrees. The angle in the opposite context is 60 degrees.
In an isosceles triangle, one of the medians is perpendicular to the opposite side of that triangle. In an equilateral triangle, all three medians are perpendicular to the sides of that triangle.
Not always. 1. The median to the base of an isosceles triangle bisects the vertex angle. 2. When the triangle is an equilateral triangle, then the medians bisect the interior angles of the triangle.
2 apex fill-in-the-blank Q's: 1) The center of gravity of a trianglular solid with uniform thickness and density is at the intersection of the medians of the triangle. 2) The center of gravity of a triangular solid with uniform thickness and density is the centroid. medians the point at which one can balance the triangle. and the point shared by a triangle's medians. medians centroid Medians i got centriod?
The point where the three medians of a triangle intersect is called the centroid of the triangle.
Yes.
The correct answer is centriod.
In an isosceles triangle, one of the medians is perpendicular to the opposite side of that triangle. In an equilateral triangle, all three medians are perpendicular to the sides of that triangle.
Not always. 1. The median to the base of an isosceles triangle bisects the vertex angle. 2. When the triangle is an equilateral triangle, then the medians bisect the interior angles of the triangle.
Equilateral
2 apex fill-in-the-blank Q's: 1) The center of gravity of a trianglular solid with uniform thickness and density is at the intersection of the medians of the triangle. 2) The center of gravity of a triangular solid with uniform thickness and density is the centroid. medians the point at which one can balance the triangle. and the point shared by a triangle's medians. medians centroid Medians i got centriod?
In an equilateral triangle, the angle bisectors are also the altitudes and medians. This is because all sides and angles are equal in an equilateral triangle, leading to a symmetry where the angle bisector from any vertex also serves as the median (dividing the opposite side into two equal segments) and the altitude (perpendicular to the opposite side). Thus, each of these segments coincides in an equilateral triangle.
The three lines joining each vertex to the midpoint of the opposite side. They are also the medians, altitudes and perpendicular bisectors of the sides. In an equilateral triangle these are coincident.
They are the lines joining each of the vertices to the mid-points of the opposite sides. In an equilateral triangle, these lines are the medians, angle bisectors, altitudes and perpendicular bisectors of the sides - all in one!
A regular triangle (aka equilateral triangle) has three lines of symmetry - these are its medians, In general, a regular n-gon has n lines of symmetry.
Any triangle has 3 medians Another answer (depending on what you are looking for) is that a triangle has concurrent medians (which means all three medians intersect at a single point).
The point where the three medians of a triangle intersect is called the centroid of the triangle.
A triangle with all corners equal is called an equilateral triangle. In an equilateral triangle, each of the three angles measures 60 degrees, and all three sides are of equal length. This symmetry gives it unique properties, such as having equal heights and medians from each vertex to the opposite side.