The perpendicular bisectors of a triangle intersect at a single point called the circumcenter. This point is equidistant from all three vertices of the triangle, making it the center of the circumcircle, which is the circle that passes through all three vertices. The circumcenter's position varies depending on the type of triangle: it lies inside an acute triangle, on the hypotenuse of a right triangle, and outside an obtuse triangle.
circumcenter
circumcenter
inscribed
y
a right triange
intersection
circumcenter
The circumcenter, the incenter is the point of concurrency of the angle bisectors of a triangle.
all three perpendicular bisectors elongate to meet at the incenter of the triangle.
Since the intersection of the perpendicular bisectors of a triangle is the center of the inscribed circle (we call it the centroid of a triangle), the answer is no.
circumcenter
circumcenter
It is the circumcentre.
The three ANGLE bisectors of a triangle also bisect the sides, and intersect at a point INSIDE the triangle. The angle bisectors are not necessarily perpendicular to them. The perpendicular bisectors of the sides can intersect in a point either inside or outside the triangle, depending on the shape of the triangle.
The three perpendicular bisectors (of the sides) of a triangle intersect at the circumcentre - the centre of the circle on which the three vertices of the triangle sit.
Circumcenter.
inscribed