1 / 15

Section 5-3 Concurrent Lines, Medians, and Altitudes

Section 5-3 Concurrent Lines, Medians, and Altitudes. B. D. F. C. A. E. Triangle Medians A median of a triangle is a line segment drawn from any vertex of the triangle to the midpoint of the opposite side.

tea
Télécharger la présentation

Section 5-3 Concurrent Lines, Medians, and Altitudes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Section 5-3 Concurrent Lines, Medians, and Altitudes

  2. B D F C A E Triangle Medians A median of a triangle is a line segment drawn from any vertex of the triangle to the midpoint of the opposite side. Question: If I printed this slide in black and white, what would be incorrect about the figure?

  3. B D F G C A E Triangle Medians Theorem The medians of a triangle are concurrent at a point (called the centroid) that is two thirds the distance from each vertex to the midpoint of the opposite side.

  4. B B E A C A C E Triangle Altitudes An altitude of a triangle is a line segment drawn from any vertex of the triangle to the opposite side, extended if necessary, and perpendicular to that side.

  5. B E A C F Why?

  6. B A C E Triangle Altitude Theorem The lines that contain the altitudes of a triangle are concurrent (at a point called the orthocenter).

  7. Triangle Perpendicular Bisectors Theorem The perpendicular bisectors of a triangle are concurrent at a point (called the circumcenter) that is equidistant from the vertices. S Y X C Q R Z The circle is circumscribed about the triangle.

  8. Triangle Angle Bisectors Theorem The bisectors of the angles of a triangle are concurrent at a point (called the incenter) that is equidistant from the sides. T Y X I U V Z The circle is inscribed in the triangle.

  9. Application W M is the centroid of triangle WOR. WM=16. Find WX. WX=24 Y Z M R O X

  10. Application In triangle TUV, Y is the centroid. YW=9. Find TY and TW. U TY=18 TW=27 W X Y V T Z

  11. Is KX a median, altitude, neither, or both? Application K both L M X

  12. Application Find the center of the circle you can circumscribe about the triangle with vertices: A (-4, 5); B (-2, 5); C (-2, -2) Hint: sketch triangle; then think about the perpendicular bisectors passing through the midpoints of the sides! (-3, 1.5)

  13. Application Find the center of the circle you can circumscribe about the triangle with vertices: X (1, 1); Y (1, 7); Z (5, 1) (3, 4)

  14. Try these constructions: • 1: Circumscribe a circle about a triangle • Draw a large triangle. • Construct the perpendicular bisectors of any two sides. The point they meet is the circumcenter. • The radius is from the circumcenter to one of the vertices. Draw a circle using this radius and it should pass through all three vertices. S Y X C Q R Z

  15. Try these constructions: • 2: Construct a circle inside a triangle • Draw a large triangle. • Construct the angle bisectors for two of the angles. The point they intersect is called the incenter. • Drop a perpendicular from the incenter to one of the sides. This is your radius. • Draw a circle using this radius and it should touch each side of the triangle. T Y X I U V Z

More Related