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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...

Cevians

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A Cevian is a line segment which joins a vertex of a triangle with a point on the opposite side (or its extension). There are 3 special types of cevians and their properties that we will be looking at today. 1. Median  A line joining the midpoint of a side of a triangle to the opposite vertex is called a median. Properties A median divides a triangle into two parts of equal area. $[ABD] = [ACD]$. The point where the three medians of a triangle meet is called the centroid of the triangle. Point $G$ is the centroid of $\triangle ABC$ The centroid of a triangle divides each median in the ratio $2:1$. $\frac{AG}{GD} = \frac{BG}{GE} = \frac{CG}{GF} = 2$ The three medians divide the triangle into $6$ triangles with equal area. $[AFG] = [BFG] = [BDG] = [CDG] = [CEG] = [AEG]$ An Important Result  $2(AD)^2 + 2 \cdot \big( \frac{BC}{2} \big) = (AB)^2 + (AC)^2$ 2. Angle Bisector An angle bisector of a triangle is a segment or ray that bisects an a...

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