Geometry for Elementary School/Congruence

From testwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Navigate

In this chapter, we will start the discussion of congruence and congruence theorems. We say the two figures are congruent if they have the same shape and size. Congruent figures have three things in common: corresponding sides (corr. sides), corresponding angles (corr. ∠s) and corresponding points (corr. points). We will only talk about congruent triangles.

Congruent triangles

The triangles ABC and DEF are congruent if and only if all the following conditions hold:

  1. The side AB equals DE. (Corresponding sides)



  2. The side BC equals EF. (Corresponding sides)



  3. The side AC equals DF. (Corresponding sides)



  4. The angle ABC equals DEF. (Corresponding angles)



  5. The angle BCA equals EFD. (Corresponding angles)



  6. The angle CAB equals FDE. (Corresponding angles)



Note that the order of vertices is important. It is possible that ABC and ACB are not congruent even though both refer to the same triangle. Remember that the place where corresponding points are must be the same on both triangles.

Congruence theorems give a set of the fewest conditions that are sufficient in order to show that two triangles are congruent. They are SSS, SAS, ASA, AAS and RHS. We will talk about them later on.

Finding the value of unknowns in triangles whose congruence is given

Let's say we have two triangles, ABC and DEF, and they are congruent. AB=3, ∠F=90° and ∠E=60°. We need to find DE and ∠A. Here's how:

F+E+D=180 ( sum of )90+60+D=180D=1809060=30


ABCDEF (given)DE=AB (corr. sides, s)DE=3&A=D (corr. s, s)A=30