Geometry/Chapter 12

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Interior angles are the angles inside a polygon. To find the sum of the interior angles, use the following expression: (n2)180 where n is the number of sides of the polygon.

Example

What is the sum of all the degrees in a pentagon?

(52)180=3180=540 there are 540 degrees in a pentagon.

In order to find how many degrees are in each side of a regular pentagon (regular meaning same length and angle for each side), take the sum of all the interior angles and divide it by how many sides there are.

5405=108

In a regular pentagon, each angle is 108 degrees

Sum of the Interior Angles of a Triangle

The sum of the interior angles of a triangle is 180 degrees.

Example Problem:

What is the third angle of a triangle, given that the other two angles are 35 degrees and 75 degrees?

Answer: 35+75=110 and 180110=70 so the third angle must be 70 degrees.

Triangle Exterior Angle Theorem

The exterior angle of a triangle is equal in measure to the sum of the two remote (not adjacent) interior angles of the triangle.

Example Problem

If the exterior angle of a triangle is 40 degrees and if one of the remote angles is 15 degrees, what is the measure of the other remote angle?

4015=25 So the other remote angle is 25 degrees.

The Sum of Exterior Angles Theorem

The sum of exterior angles of a convex polygon taken one at each vertex is 360 degrees.

Exercises

Example Problem If a regular polygon has 15 sides, what is the measure of each exterior angle?

Answer: 36015=24 so each exterior angle is 24. The interior angles must add to 180 so 18024=156 so each interior angle is 156 degrees.

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