It is the orthocentre.
incenter
The orthocenter is the point where the altitudes of a triangle intersect. An orthocenter lies outside of a triangle only when the triangle is obtuse. If a triangle is acute, the orthocenter lies inside of the triangle.
When the triangle is right, the orthocenter is the polygon vertex of the right angle. Intuitively this makes sense because the orthocenter is where the altitudes intersect. Hence, in a right triangle, the vertex of the right angle is where you would expect the altitudes to meet, at 90 degrees, where the legs of the right triangle are perpendicular.
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.
False
The altitudes of a triangle intersect at a point called the Orthocentre.Note : This is often stated as, "The altitudes are concurrent at a point called the Orthocentre."
A. The point where the three altitudes of the triangle intersect. ~Apex
the point where the altitudes intersect is called the orthocenter.
The point where the altitudes of a triangle intersect is called the orthocenter. This point is concurrent, meaning the three altitudes intersect at this single point inside or outside the triangle. The orthocenter is different from the centroid, circumcenter, and incenter of a triangle.
No, the circumcenter is not the point shared by the altitudes of a triangle; that point is called the orthocenter. The circumcenter is the point where the perpendicular bisectors of the sides of a triangle intersect, and it is the center of the circumcircle. In contrast, the altitudes of a triangle intersect at the orthocenter, which is a different point altogether.
No. Only 2 altitudes can intersect at a point. * * * * * True but even they do not meet in the interior. The altitudes of a right angles triangle meet at the right angled vertex. The vertex is at the boundary of the triangle, not in the interior.
The point where the altitudes of a triangle intersect is called the orthocenter. This point can lie inside the triangle for acute triangles, on the triangle for right triangles, and outside the triangle for obtuse triangles. The orthocenter is one of the triangle's key centers, along with the centroid and circumcenter.
I think it is the vertex. * * * * * No. It is the orthocentre.
The point where the three altitudes of a triangle intersect is called the "orthocenter." It can be located inside the triangle for acute triangles, on the triangle for right triangles, and outside the triangle for obtuse triangles. The orthocenter is one of the triangle's key points, along with the centroid and circumcenter.
Actually, the orthocenter of a triangle is the point where the three altitudes of the triangle intersect. The altitudes are perpendicular lines drawn from each vertex to the opposite side. The angle bisectors of a triangle intersect at the incenter, not the orthocenter.
The 'orthcentre' of a triangle is at the point where the 3 perpendicular altitudes intersect within the triangle.
The point where the three altitudes of a triangle intersect is called the orthocenter. This can be located either inside or outside of the triangle.