yes it is
The three angle bisectors in a triangle always intersect in one point, and this intersection point always lies in the interior of the triangle. The intersection of the three angle bisectors forms the center of the circle in- scribed in the triangle. (The circle which is tangent to all three sides.) The angle bisectors meet at the incenter which has trilinear coordinates.
Orthocenter My improvement: The three angle bisectors will intersect at a point called the incenter. At this point it also the center of the largest possible circle within the triangle. Since a circle has a center point, this point within the triangle is called the incenter. The three heights of a triangle will meet at a special point called the orthocenter.
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.
Center
Yes, that's correct. The point of concurrency for the perpendicular bisectors of a triangle is called the circumcenter, and it is the center of the circumscribed circle of the triangle.
yes it is
Concentric circles are the circles with the same center therefore they do not cross with each other as the "center is not considered a point on the circle". An exception would be two circles that are concentric and have the same radius, in which case the circles are indistinct and every point of the circles is an intersection.
== == Inscribed is a polygon inside a circle with all points on a given point in the circle. Circumscribed is a circle inside a polygon with any given point touching just one point on the polygon. Hope this helped.
The best tool to locate the center of a circle would be a compass. By placing the compass on the edge of the circle and drawing an arc, then repeating this process from another point on the circle, the intersection point of the arcs will give you the center of the circle.
Circumcenter, this is the center-point of a circle circumscribed around the triangle. If the triangle is obtuse, then this point is outside the triangle and if the triangle is a right triangle, then the point is the midpoint of the hypotenuse.
The perpendicular bisector of ANY chord of the circle goes through the center. Each side of a triangle mentioned would be a chord of the circle therefore it is true that the perpendicular bisectors of each side intersect at the center.
assuming this is a regular pentagon (all five sides are equal length) the center is the intersection of the intersection of perpendicular bisectors of each side and should also be the center of the circle in which it is inscribed
The three angle bisectors in a triangle always intersect in one point, and this intersection point always lies in the interior of the triangle. The intersection of the three angle bisectors forms the center of the circle in- scribed in the triangle. (The circle which is tangent to all three sides.) The angle bisectors meet at the incenter which has trilinear coordinates.
The intersection of a sphere with a plane is a point, or a circle.
The point from which the circle is drawn IS the center.
Definition: a tangent is a line that intersects a circle at exactly one point, the point of intersection is the point of contact or the point of tangency. a tangent is a line that intersects a circle at exactly one point, the point of intersection is the (point of contact) or the **point of tangency**.