Equilateral and Equiangular Polygons

A polygon is a 2 dimensional geometric figure bound with straight sides. A polygon is called Equilateral if all of its sides are congruent. Common examples of equilateral polygons are a rhombus and regular polygons such as equilateral triangles and squares.  Now, a polygon is equiangular if all of its internal angles are congruent.  Some important facts to consider The only equiangular triangle is the equilateral triangle If P is an equilateral polygon that has more than three sides, it does not have to be equiangular. A rhombus with no right angle is an example of an equilateral but non-equiangular polygon.  Rectangles, including squares, are the only equiangular quadrilaterals Equiangular polygon theorem. Each angle of an equiangular n-gon is  $$\Bigg(\frac{n-2}{n}\Bigg)180^{\circ} = 180^{\circ} -   \frac{360^{\circ}}{n} $$ Viviani's theorem   Vincenzo Viviani (1622 – 1703) was a famous Italian mathematician. With his exceptional intelligence in math...

Circle Basics

The past 2 weeks that I have been away, were quite the adventure in the Grand Teton and the Yellowstone National Parks. As a family we have always loved spending time outdoors and this was the perfect trip right before the onset of my sophomore year. Getting back to life always seems so hard after a trip like that. Before I digress too much, lets get back to work.

Today I would like to review the fundamentals of Circles.

Let's first understand the different components of a Circle. Here are the key terms you should know.

Radius - Line Segment from the center of the Circle to a point on the circumference.







Diameter - Line Segment from one point on the circumference to another point on the circumference that passes through the center of the Circle. Needless to say, the length of the diameter is twice that of the radius.







Area - The set of all points contained inside the circumference. Can be found using the formula $ \pi r^2$ where $r$ is the radius.







Circumference - The linear distance around the circle. The circumference equals $2 \pi r$.







Sector - The portion of a circle enclosed by two radii and an arc. The area of this sector can be found with $\pi r^2 \cdot \frac{\theta}{360^{\circ}}$ where $\theta$ is the angle measure of the arc.







Chord - A segment with both endpoints on the circumference. Recall that this is similar to the definition of a diameter. However, the chord does not necessarily pass through the center of the circle, which means that every diameter is a chord but not all chords are diameters.







Circular Segments - The region bounded by a chord and the arc subtended by it. To find the area of this region, you subtract the area of the triangle from the area of the sector.







Secant - Similar to a chord, but with one side extended past the circumference of the circle.







Tangent Line - A line that intersects a circle at only one point. Note that the angle formed by the radius of the circle to the point of tangency with the line makes a $90^{\circ}$.


I will follow up with another post talking about circles and angles pertaining to them. 

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