There is no name for it except "A line perpendicular to a line segment and passing through its midpoint".
A bisector is a line (or line segment) which passes through the midpoint. You can have multiple lines intersect at this one point, and all of them will bisect the original line segment, since they pass through its midpoint. A perpendicular bisector passes through the midpoint, and also is perpendicular to the original line segment, so there will be only one of those.
A midpoint is a point. It's the point exactly halfway between the endsof a line segment.A perpendicular bisector is a line. It's the line that passes through themidpoint of the segment, and is perpendicular to the segment.
It is the perpendicular bisector
Perpendicular lines passing through a point are at right angles to each other.
the answer is always
A line that is perpendicular to the segment of a plane and passes through the midpoint.
A perpendicular bisector.
a line that intersects an edge of a triangle that is perpendicular to it and passes through the midpoint
The perpendicular bisector of a line segment AB is the straight line perpendicular to AB through the midpoint of AB.
A bisector is a line (or line segment) which passes through the midpoint. You can have multiple lines intersect at this one point, and all of them will bisect the original line segment, since they pass through its midpoint. A perpendicular bisector passes through the midpoint, and also is perpendicular to the original line segment, so there will be only one of those.
A midpoint is a point. It's the point exactly halfway between the endsof a line segment.A perpendicular bisector is a line. It's the line that passes through themidpoint of the segment, and is perpendicular to the segment.
It is the perpendicular bisector
Perpendicular lines passing through a point are at right angles to each other.
the answer is always
Perpendicular to a line passing through the center of the Earth.
Those would be perpendicular bisectors. If you do that to each side of the triangle they all meet at what is called the circumcenter. http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Circumcircle.html
Points: (7, 7) and (3, 5) Midpoint: (5, 6) Slope: 1/2 Perpendicular slope: -2 Use: y-6 = -2(x-5) Perpendicular bisector equation: y = -2x+16 or as 2x+y-16 = 0