Angles and Triangles
1.1 Angles and Triangles
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Understanding the relationships among angles and sides in triangles—especially right, isosceles, and equilateral triangles—and the properties of angles formed by parallel lines provides the geometric foundation for trigonometry.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- Sum of angles in any triangle: always equals 180°, which is the basis for finding unknown angles.
- Special triangle properties: right triangles have one 90° angle; equilateral triangles have all angles equal (60° each); isosceles triangles have two equal base angles.
- Angle relationships: vertical angles are equal; supplementary angles sum to 180°; complementary angles sum to 90°.
- Common confusion: vertex angle vs. vertical angles—vertex angle is the angle between the equal sides of an isosceles triangle; vertical angles are non-adjacent angles formed by intersecting lines.
- Parallel lines and transversals: when a line crosses two parallel lines, alternate interior angles and corresponding angles are equal.
📐 Fundamental angle measurements
📐 Basic angle units and types
One full rotation = 360°
A straight angle = 180° (half rotation)
A right angle = 90° (quarter rotation)
- Degrees are the standard unit for measuring angles.
- These reference values anchor all other angle calculations.
🔺 Acute vs. obtuse angles
- Acute angles: between 0° and 90°.
- Obtuse angles: between 90° and 180°.
- Example: In a triangle, you cannot have more than one obtuse angle because the sum of all three angles must equal 180°.
➕ Supplementary and complementary angles
Supplementary angles: two angles that add to 180°
Complementary angles: two angles that add to 90°
- Supplementary angles often appear when two angles form a straight line.
- In a right triangle, the two smaller angles are complementary (they sum to 90°).
- Don't confuse: supplementary (180°) vs. complementary (90°).
🔺 Core triangle properties
🔺 Sum of angles in a triangle
The sum of the angles in a triangle is 180°.
- This is the most fundamental triangle fact.
- If you tear off the three corners of any triangle and line them up, they form a straight angle (180°).
- Example: If two angles are 25° and 115°, the third angle x satisfies x + 25 + 115 = 180, so x = 40°.
📏 Relationship between sides and angles
- Standard labeling: angles are A, B, C; the side opposite angle A is called a, opposite B is b, opposite C is c.
- Key observation from the excerpt's activities: when sides are ordered a > b > c, the angles opposite them are ordered A > B > C.
- In other words, the largest angle is opposite the longest side, and the smallest angle is opposite the shortest side.
🔲 Special triangle types
⊿ Right triangles
A right triangle has one angle of 90°.
- The side opposite the 90° angle is the hypotenuse, which is always the longest side.
- The two smaller angles in a right triangle are complementary (they sum to 90°).
- Example: If one smaller angle is 34°, the other is 90 − 34 = 56°.
🔺 Pythagorean theorem and its converse
Pythagorean theorem: If a, b, and c are the sides of a right triangle and c is the hypotenuse, then a² + b² = c².
- The hypothesis is the "if" part; the conclusion is the "then" part.
- The converse interchanges hypothesis and conclusion: If a² + b² = c², then the triangle is a right triangle.
- The converse is also true and can be used to test whether a triangle is right.
- Example: For a = 12, b = 16, c = 20, check 12² + 16² = 144 + 256 = 400 = 20², so it is a right triangle.
🔼 Equilateral triangles
An equilateral triangle has all three sides the same length.
All of the angles of an equilateral triangle are equal.
- Since the sum of angles is 180° and all three are equal, each angle is 180 ÷ 3 = 60°.
- Example: If all three sides are 4 feet, then 3x = 180, so x = 60°.
🔻 Isosceles triangles
An isosceles triangle has two sides of equal length.
The base angles of an isosceles triangle are equal.
- The vertex angle is the angle between the two equal sides.
- The other two angles are the base angles, and they are equal.
- Example: If the base angles are each 38°, the vertex angle x satisfies x + 38 + 38 = 180, so x = 104°.
- Don't confuse: the vertex angle (part of the triangle) with vertical angles (formed by intersecting lines).
🔀 Angle relationships from intersecting and parallel lines
✖️ Vertical angles
Vertical angles: non-adjacent angles formed by the intersection of two straight lines.
Vertical angles are equal.
- When two lines cross, they form four angles; opposite (non-adjacent) pairs are vertical angles.
- Example: If one angle is 50°, the vertical angle opposite it is also 50°.
⫴ Parallel lines cut by a transversal
When parallel lines are intersected by a transversal, the alternate interior angles are equal. Corresponding angles are also equal.
- A transversal is a line that intersects two parallel lines, forming eight angles.
- Corresponding angles: angles in the same position relative to the transversal on each parallel line (e.g., angles 1 and 5 in the excerpt's diagram).
- Alternate interior angles: angles on opposite sides of the transversal between the parallel lines (e.g., angles 3 and 6, or 4 and 5).
- Example: In a parallelogram formed by two sets of parallel lines, opposite angles are equal because alternate interior and corresponding angles are equal.
- Adjacent angles of a parallelogram are supplementary (they sum to 180°).
📊 Summary of key geometric facts
| Fact | Statement | Example use |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Sum of angles in a triangle | Sum = 180° | Find the third angle when two are known |
| 2. Right triangle | One angle = 90° | The two smaller angles are complementary |
| 3. Equilateral triangle | All angles equal | Each angle = 60° |
| 4. Isosceles triangle | Base angles equal | Find vertex angle from base angles |
| 5. Vertical angles | Vertical angles equal | Find unknown angles at intersections |
| 6. Parallel lines + transversal | Alternate interior and corresponding angles equal | Find angles in parallelograms and other figures |
🧮 Exterior angles (from homework problems)
- An exterior angle of a triangle is formed by one side and the extension of an adjacent side.
- The excerpt's problems suggest finding a rule: the exterior angle equals the sum of the two non-adjacent interior angles (α and β in the diagram).
- Example: If the two non-adjacent interior angles are 40° and 80°, the exterior angle is 40 + 80 = 120°.
🔤 Greek letters for angles
- Trigonometry often uses lowercase Greek letters to denote angle measures: α (alpha), β (beta), γ (gamma), θ (theta), φ (phi), ψ (psi), etc.
- The excerpt provides a full table of the Greek alphabet for reference.