The sum of the interior angles is 6480 degrees.
No - the sum of the interior angles of a triangle mustadd up to 180 degrees. Since you already have one angle of 90 degrees, the sum of the other two angles must also total 90. 38+54 is 92 !
Complementary angles are angles that always add to 90° (ninety degrees). They are usually adjacent to each other, however in theory do not have to be. An example is: Angle "a" is 38°, and is situated next to, or adjacent to Angle "b" which is 52°. In this case, both angles (38 and 52) sum to ninety degrees, which means Angle a is complementary with, or to, Angle b. Another example is: Angle "a" is 56°, and is situated next to, or adjacent to Angle "b" which is 43°. In this case, both angles (56 and 43) do not sum to ninety degrees, which means Angle a is not complementary with, or to, Angle b. Complementary angles are studied in conjunction with supplementary angles (angles which sum to 180°) and angles at a point (angles which sum to 360°). Note: There does not have to be only two angles (however this is the minimum requirement, because a ninety degree angle can't have a complement of 0°). There can be three, five, ten, twenty, or whatever number of angles you wish (remember, you are not limited to there being ninety one degree angles because angles can have decimal points too, i.e. 56.32°). Hope this helped.
180*(40-2) = 180*38 = 6840 degrees.
No; a right triangle cannot have two angles that are measured 38 and 54 degrees. This is because a right triangle must have one angle that is equal to 90 degrees, for this is a basic property of a right triangle. The sum of the angles in the triangle must be 180 degrees. In order to prove that there indeed cannot be a triangle with angles measuring 90, 38, and 54 degrees, you add the three. If their sum is greater than 180 degrees, then it is impossible; as in this case, where the sum totals to 182 degrees.
(180 - 38)/2 = 71 degrees (base angles of an isosceles triangle are congruent).
180⁰(38 - 2) = 6,480⁰
The sum of the interior angles of an n-gon is found by the formula: (n-2)*(180) degrees. So a 38-gon would have (38-2)*(180) degree sum for its interior angles, which equals 6,480 degrees.
The sum of the interior angles of an n-gon is (n-2)*180 degrees. So, for a 40-gon, the sum of the interior angles would be 38*180 = 6840 degrees. If the 40-gon was not regular that is as far as you could go. But if it was a regular n-gon, then all its interior angles are equal, and each would be of 6840/40 = 171 degrees.
The sum of the interior angles of a polygon is 2n - 4 right angles where n is the number of sides. When n = 21 then 2n - 4 = 42 - 4 = 38 right angles = 38 x 90 = 3420°. NOTE : If the polygon is a regular polygon then each interior angle measures 3420 ÷ 21 = 162.86°.
38 x 90 ie 3420o
Sum of interior angles of a 38 sided polygon: (38-2)*180 = 6480 degrees
38, 52 degree.
No - the sum of the interior angles of a triangle mustadd up to 180 degrees. Since you already have one angle of 90 degrees, the sum of the other two angles must also total 90. 38+54 is 92 !
Complementary angles are angles that always add to 90° (ninety degrees). They are usually adjacent to each other, however in theory do not have to be. An example is: Angle "a" is 38°, and is situated next to, or adjacent to Angle "b" which is 52°. In this case, both angles (38 and 52) sum to ninety degrees, which means Angle a is complementary with, or to, Angle b. Another example is: Angle "a" is 56°, and is situated next to, or adjacent to Angle "b" which is 43°. In this case, both angles (56 and 43) do not sum to ninety degrees, which means Angle a is not complementary with, or to, Angle b. Complementary angles are studied in conjunction with supplementary angles (angles which sum to 180°) and angles at a point (angles which sum to 360°). Note: There does not have to be only two angles (however this is the minimum requirement, because a ninety degree angle can't have a complement of 0°). There can be three, five, ten, twenty, or whatever number of angles you wish (remember, you are not limited to there being ninety one degree angles because angles can have decimal points too, i.e. 56.32°). Hope this helped.
180*(40-2) = 180*38 = 6840 degrees.
No; a right triangle cannot have two angles that are measured 38 and 54 degrees. This is because a right triangle must have one angle that is equal to 90 degrees, for this is a basic property of a right triangle. The sum of the angles in the triangle must be 180 degrees. In order to prove that there indeed cannot be a triangle with angles measuring 90, 38, and 54 degrees, you add the three. If their sum is greater than 180 degrees, then it is impossible; as in this case, where the sum totals to 182 degrees.
To find the number of sides on a polygon with a sum of interior angles of 6840 degrees, we can use the formula: (n-2) * 180 = 6840, where n represents the number of sides. Solving for n, we get n = (6840 / 180) + 2 = 38. Therefore, the polygon has 38 sides.