An equilateral triangle is a special isosceles triangle in which all three sides are congruent. Equilateral triangles are also equiangular, which means all three angles are congruent. The measure of each angle is 60 degrees.
Yes because the measure of each angle in an equilateral triangle is 60 degrees which is an acute angle.
60 degrees
An equilateral triangle has all three sides of equal length and all three angles measuring 60 degrees. A right angle, by definition, measures 90 degrees, which exceeds the angle measurements of an equilateral triangle. Since the sum of the angles in any triangle must equal 180 degrees, having one angle as 90 degrees would require the other two angles to sum to 90 degrees, violating the property of equal angles in an equilateral triangle. Therefore, it is impossible for an equilateral triangle to have a right angle.
In an equilateral triangle all the angles are 60 degrees (i.e. acute angles)
Each angle to an equilateral triangle is 60 degrees and can be worked out by dividing 180 degrees (the sum of all angles) by 3.
No, an equilateral triangle can't have a right angle, because an equilateral triangle has 3 equal angles of 60 degrees that add up to 180 degrees.
60 degrees
No, an equilateral triangle can't have a right angle, because an equilateral triangle has 3 equal angles of 60 degrees that add up to 180 degrees.
No, an equilateral triangle must also be equiangular (three equal angles). Since all three angles must add up to 180 degrees, this means each angle in an equilateral triangle must be 60 degrees (180 divided by 3). Right triangles must have exactly 1 90 degree angle, so an equilateral triangle is never a right triangle.
Each angle is 60 degrees.
Each interior angle of an equilateral triangle measures 60 degrees
Yes because the measure of each angle in an equilateral triangle is 60 degrees which is an acute angle.
60 degrees
An equilateral triangle has all three sides of equal length and all three angles measuring 60 degrees. A right angle, by definition, measures 90 degrees, which exceeds the angle measurements of an equilateral triangle. Since the sum of the angles in any triangle must equal 180 degrees, having one angle as 90 degrees would require the other two angles to sum to 90 degrees, violating the property of equal angles in an equilateral triangle. Therefore, it is impossible for an equilateral triangle to have a right angle.
In an equilateral triangle all the angles are 60 degrees (i.e. acute angles)
Each of the interior angles of an equilateral triangle is 120 degrees.
Each angle to an equilateral triangle is 60 degrees and can be worked out by dividing 180 degrees (the sum of all angles) by 3.