centroid
It is called the centroid.
The Centroid
true
The medians of a triangle are concurrent and the point of concurrence, the centroid, is one-third of the distance from the opposite side to the vertex along the median
centroid
The Centroid
It is called the centroid.
It is the centroid - the point at which the medians meet.
The point of concurrency of the medians of a triangle is called the centroid. It is the point where all three medians intersect each other. The centroid divides each median into two segments, with the segment closer to the vertex being twice as long as the other segment.
The Centroid
true
A point of concurrency is a point where three or more lines, segments, or rays intersect or meet. Common points of concurrency in geometry include the centroid, circumcenter, incenter, and orthocenter of a triangle.
The medians of a triangle are concurrent and the point of concurrence, the centroid, is one-third of the distance from the opposite side to the vertex along the median
the centroid. here are all the points of concurrency: perpendicular bisector- circumcenter altitudes- orthocenter angle bisector- incenter median- centroid hope that was helpful :)
The point of concurrency is the point intersection.
In short, the orthocenter really has no purpose. There are 4 points of Concurrency in Triangles: 1) The Centroid - the point of concurrency where the 3 medians of a triangle meet. This point is also the triangle's center of gravity. 2) The Circumcenter - the point of concurrency where the perpendicular bisectors of all three sides of the triangle meet. This point is the center of the triangle's circumscribed circle. 3) The Incenter - the point of concurrency where the angle bisectors of all three angles of the triangle meet. Like the circumcenter, the incenter is the center of the inscribed circle of a triangle. 4) The Orthocenter - the point of concurrency where the 3 altitudes of a triangle meet. Unlike the other three points of concurrency, the orthocenter is only there to show that altitudes are concurrent. Thus, bringing me back to the initial statement.