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CK-12 Foundation
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AUTHOR
CK-12 Foundation
iii
Contents
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Contents
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Review
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5.7
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Contents
11.2
11.3
11.4
11.5
11.6
11.7
11.8
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Geometry - Second Edition, Surface Area of Prisms and Cylinders, Review Answers
Geometry - Second Edition, Surface Area of Pyramids and Cones, Review Answers .
Geometry - Second Edition, Volume of Prisms and Cylinders, Review Answers . . .
Geometry - Second Edition, Volume of Pyramids and Cones, Review Answers . . . .
Geometry - Second Edition, Surface Area and Volume of Spheres, Review Answers .
Geometry - Second Edition, Exploring Similar Solids, Review Answers . . . . . . .
Chapter Review Answers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
vi
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C HAPTER
Basics of Geometry,
Answer Key
Chapter Outline
1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.5
1.6
1.7
1.1. Geometry - Second Edition, Points, Lines, and Planes, Review Answers
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1.
2.
3.
4.
6. W X, YW , line m, XY and WY .
2
5.
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9. A circle.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
PQ intersects RS at point Q.
Points E and H are coplanar, but their rays, EF and GH are non-coplanar.
IJ , IK, IL, and IM with common endpoint I and J, K, L and M are non-collinear.
Always
Sometimes
Sometimes
Sometimes
Never
Always
Sometimes
Never
Always
Sometimes
#18: By definition, a point does not take up any space, it is only a location. #21: The ray is never read BA,
the endpoint is always stated first.
To make #15 true, they must be three non-collinear points. For #16, the two rays must lie on the same line,
which it does not state. For #20, four points could be coplanar, but you only need three points to make a plane,
so the fourth point could be in another plane. For #23, theorems can also be proven true by definitions and
previously proven theorems.
The walls, ceiling and floor are all planes. When two of them intersect the intersection is a line (i.e. the ceiling
and a wall). When two walls and either the ceiling or the floor intersect the intersection is a point.
The spokes on a wheel are segments. They intersect at a point.
Cities on a map are points and the distance between them can be found by measuring the segment connecting
the points.
29-33.
3
1.1. Geometry - Second Edition, Points, Lines, and Planes, Review Answers
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1.625 in
2.875 in
3.7 cm
8.2 cm
2.75 in
4.9 cm
4.625 in
8.7 cm
9.
10. O would be halfway between L and T , so that LO = OT = 8 cm
11.
a.
b. TA + AQ = T Q
c. T Q = 15 in
12.
a.
b. HM + MA = HA
c. AM = 11 cm
13. BC = 8 cm, BD = 25 cm, and CD = 17 cm
15.
a.
b.
c.
d.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
RS = 4
QS = 14
TS = 8
TV = 12
x = 3, HJ = 21, JK = 12, HK = 33
x = 11, HJ = 52, JK = 79, HK = 131
x = 1, HJ = 2 31 , JK = 5 32 , HK = 8
x = 17, HJ = 27, JK = 153, KH = 180
x = 16, HJ = 7, JK = 15, KH = 22
One possible answer.
5
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|7 (6)|= 13
|3 2|= 5
|0 (9)|= 9
|4 1|= 5
Answers vary, but hopefully most students found their heights to be between 7 and 8 heads.
Answers should include some reference to the idea that multiplying and dividing by ten (according to the
prefixes) is much easier than keeping track of 12 inches in a ft, 3 ft in a yard, 5280 ft in a mile, etc.
28. Answers vary, but students should recognize that the pedometer is more likely to yield a false reading because
a persons stride length varies. One possible way to minimize this error would be to average a persons stride
length over a relatively long distance-i.e. count the number of steps taken in 100 m.
29. Answers vary. The cubit was the first recorded unit of measure and it was integral to the building of the
Egyptian pyramids.
30. Students should comment on the ideal proportions found in the human face and how these correspond to
our perception of beauty.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
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12. Obtuse
13. Obtuse
14. Acute
15. Obtuse
17 & 18: Drawings should look exactly like 12 and 16, but with the appropriate arc marks.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
40
122
18
87
AE = CD, ED = CB, m6 EDC = 90 , m6 EAC = m6 ABC
24.
25. An interior point would be (2, 0).
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28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
27.
m6 QOP = 100
m6 QOT = 130
m6 ROQ = 30
m6 SOP = 70
(x + 7) + (2x + 19) = 56
(3x + 26) = 56
3x = 30
x = 10
(4x 23) + (4x 23) = 130
(8x 46) = 130
8x = 176
x = 22
(5x 13) + 90 = (16x 55)
(5x + 77) = (16x 55)
22 = 11x
x = 2
(x 9) + (5x + 1) = (9x 80)
(6x 8) = (9x 80)
72 = 3x
x = 24
Students should comment about the necessity to have a number of degrees in a line that is divisible by 30, 45,
60 and 90 degrees because these degree measures are prevalent in the study of geometrical figures. Basically,
setting the measure of a straight line equal to 180 degrees allows us to have more whole number degree
measures in common geometrical figures.
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1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
12 in
5 in
5 in
13 in
90
10 in
24 in
90
8 triangles
PS
QT ,V S
90
45
bisector
bisector
PU is a segment bisector of QT
45
x = 9, y = 14
x = 14
x = 20
d = 13
x = 12
a = 22 , x = 12
55 each
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28. 2 in each
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
(3, -5)
(1.5, -6)
(5, 5)
(-4.5, 2)
(7, 10)
11
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35. (6, 9)
36. This is incorrect. She should have written AB = CD or AB
= CD.
37. This formula will give the same answer.
x1 + x2 y1 + y2
,
= (mx , my )
2
2
y1 + y2
x1 + x2
= mx and
= my
2
2
amp; x1 + x2 = 2mx and y1 + y2 = 2my
amp; x1 = 2mx x2
For#34,
and y1 = 2my y2
x1 = 2(3) (1) = 7
y1 = 2(6) 2 = 10
38.
39. A square or a rectangle.
40. Midpoint could be used to determine where you might want to make a stop halfway through a trip (if using a
map the longitude and latitude could be used in the formula for midpoint). We often want to find the middle
of something-the middle of a wall to hang a picture, the middle of a room to divide it in half, etc.
12
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45
8
71
(90 z)
a.
b.
c.
d.
135
62
148
(180 x)
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
6
6
6
6
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
117
90
63
117
Always
Sometimes
Never
Always
Always
Never
Sometimes
Always
x = 7
x = 34
y = 13
x = 17
x = 15
y = 9
y = 8
x = 10.5
x = 4
y = 3
x = 67 , y = 40
x = 38 , y = 25
x = 15 , x = 4
x = 11 ,
x = 2
x = 1 + 102, x = 1 102
x = 11 , y = 7
13
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10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
9.
All the angles in an equilateral triangle must be equal. So, an equilateral triangle is also an equiangular
triangle.
Concave pentagon
Convex octagon
Convex 17-gon
Convex decagon
Concave quadrilateral
Concave hexagon
A is not a polygon because the two sides do not meet at a vertex; B is not a polygon because one side is curved;
C is not a polygon because it is not closed.
2 diagonals
19. 5 diagonals
14
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20. A dodecagon has twelve sides, so you can draw nine diagonals from one vertex.
21. The pattern is below
TABLE 1.1:
Number of sides
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
This shows us that the number diagonals from one vertex increase by one each time. So, for an ngon, there are
(n 3) diagonals from one vertex.
22. Octagon has 20 total diagonals Nonagon has 27 total diagonals Decagon has 35 total diagonals Undecagon
has 44 total diagonals Dodecagon has 54 total diagonals The pattern is 0, 2, 5, 9, 14, 20, 27, 35, 44, 54. To
find the next term you would add one more than was added previously. For example, the next term you would
add 11. The equation is n(n3)
2 .
23. Sometimes
24. Always
25. Always
26. Never
27. Always
28. Sometimes, a square is ALWAYS a quadrilateral.
29. Sometimes, you can draw AT MOST n 3 diagonals from one vertex.
30. Sometimes, a 5-point star is ALWAYS a decagon.
For questions 31-34 answers will vary.
31.
15
32.
33.
34. a rhombus or diamond
36. Use #9 to help you. It is the same construction, but do not draw the third side.
16
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E
B
L
A
H
M
F
O
J
G
I
K
D
C
N
17
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C HAPTER
Chapter Outline
2.1
2.2
18
2.3
2.4
2.5
G EOMETRY - S ECOND E DITION , P ROOFS ABOUT A NGLE PAIRS AND S EG MENTS , R EVIEW A NSWERS
2.6
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a.
b. there are two more points in each star than its figure number.
c. n + 2
4.
a. 10;
b. 48
c. 2n
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
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22. Maddie has experimented multiple times and recognized a pattern in her results. This is a good example of
inductive reasoning.
23. Juan does not use inductive reasoning correctly. It is important that conclusions are based on multiple
observations which establish a pattern of results. He only has one trial.
24. Answers vary-correct answers should include multiple experiments or trials which indicate a clear pattern for
outcomes.
25. Answers vary.
26. n(n+3)
2
27. (n+1)(n+2)
2
28. n(n+1)(n+2)
2
29. Students should notice that the points are collinear. Thus, they could find the rule by finding the equation of
the line using any two of the three points. The equation is y = 5x 2.
30. The sequences in problems 5, 6 and 8 are of the same type. They can be modeled by linear equations because
they have a constant slope or rate of change. In other words, the same value is added or subtracted each time
to get the next term.
20
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8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
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Yes.
No, x could equal -4.
No, again x could equal -4.
Yes.
a.
b.
c.
d.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
a.
b.
c.
d.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
a.
b.
c.
d.
Yes.
No, 6 ABC could be any value between 0 and 90 degrees.
No, again 6 ABC could be any value between 0 and 90 degrees.
Yes.
26.
27.
28.
22
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10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
TABLE 2.1:
p
T
F
p
F
T
p p
F
F
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TABLE 2.2:
p
T
T
F
F
p
F
F
T
T
q
T
F
T
F
q
F
T
F
T
p q
F
T
T
T
q q
T
T
T
T
p (p q)
T
T
F
F
TABLE 2.3:
p
T
T
F
F
q
F
T
F
T
q
T
F
T
F
TABLE 2.4:
p
T
T
T
T
F
F
F
F
q
T
T
F
F
T
T
F
F
r
T
F
T
F
T
F
T
F
r
F
T
F
T
F
T
F
T
pq
T
T
F
F
F
F
F
F
(p q) r
T
T
F
T
F
T
F
T
qr
T
F
T
T
T
F
T
T
p ( q r)
T
T
T
T
T
F
T
T
TABLE 2.5:
p
T
T
T
T
F
F
F
F
q
T
T
F
F
T
T
F
F
24
r
T
F
T
F
T
F
T
F
q
F
F
T
T
F
F
T
T
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TABLE 2.6:
p
T
T
T
T
F
F
F
F
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
q
T
T
F
F
T
T
F
F
r
T
F
T
F
T
F
T
F
r
F
T
F
T
F
T
F
T
q r
T
T
F
T
T
T
F
T
p (q r)
T
T
F
T
F
F
F
F
There are two more T s in #24. We can conclude that parenthesis placement matters.
p q r is always true except the one case when p, q, and r are all false.
True; Law of Syllogism
Not valid
True; Law of Contrapositive
Not valid
True; Law of Detachment
Not valid
25
2.4. Geometry - Second Edition, Algebraic and Congruence Properties, Review Answers
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6
5. 5m ABC = 540
m6 ABC = 108
Division PoE
6. 10b 2(b + 3) = 5b
10b 2b 6 = 5b
Distributive Property
8b 6 = 5b
Combine like terms
6 = 3b
Subtraction PoE
2=b
Division PoE
b=2
Symmetric PoE
7. 14 y + 56 = 31
3y + 10 = 4
Multiplication PoE (multiplied everything by 12)
3y = 6
Subtraction PoE
y = 2
Division PoE
8. 14 AB + 31 AB = 12 + 21 AB
3AB + 4AB = 144 + 6AB
Multiplication PoE (multiplied everything by 12)
7AB = 144 + 6AB
Combine like terms
AB = 144
Subtraction PoE
9. 3 = x
10. 12x 32
11. x = 12
12. y + z = x + y
13. CD = 5
14. z + 4 = y 7
15. Yes, they are collinear. 16 + 7 = 23
16. No, they are not collinear, 9 + 9 6= 16. I cannot be the midpoint.
17. 6 NOP must be an obtuse angle because it is supplementary with 56 , meaning that m6 NOP is 180 56 =
124 . 90 < 124 < 180 , so by definition 6 NOP is an obtuse angle.
18. 6 ABC
= 6 DEF
6 GHI
= 6 JKL;
= 6 s have = measures; m6 ABC + m6 GHI = m6 DEF + m6 GHI; Substitution
19. M is the midpoint of AN, N is the midpoint MB; AM = MN, MN = NB; Transitive
20. 6 BFE or 6 BFG
21. EFBF
22. Yes, EG = FH because EF = GH and EF + FG = EG and FG + GH = FH by the Segment Addition
Postulate. FG = FG by the Reflexive Property and with substitution EF + FG = EG and FG + EF = FH.
26
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TABLE 2.7:
Statement
1. 6 EBF
= 6 HCG
6 ABE
6
= DCH
2. m6 EBF = m6 HCG
m 6 ABE = m6 DCH
3. m6 ABF = m6 EBF + m6 ABE
m 6 DCG = m6 HCG + m6 DCH
4. m6 ABF = m6 EBF + m6 ABE
m 6 DCG = m6 EBF + m6 ABE
5. m6 ABF = m6 DCG
6. 6 ABF
= 6 DCG
Reason
Given
TABLE 2.8:
Statement
1. AB = CD
2. BC = BC
3. AB + BC = CD + BC
4. AC = BD
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
Reason
Given
Reflexive PoE
Addition PoE
Segment Addition Postulate
No
No
Yes
Yes
No
No
See the following table:
TABLE 2.9:
Statement
1. 6 DAB is a right angle
2. m6 DAB = 90
3. AC bisects 6 DAB
4. m6 DAC = m6 BAC
5. m6 DAB = m6 DAC + m6 BAC
6. m6 DAB = m6 BAC + m6 BAC
7. m6 DAB = 2m6 BAC
8. 90 = 2m6 BAC
9. 45 = m6 BAC
Reason
Given
Definition of a right angle
Given
Definition of an angle bisector
Angle Addition Postulate
Substitution PoE
Combine like terms
Substitution PoE
Division PoE
27
2.4. Geometry - Second Edition, Algebraic and Congruence Properties, Review Answers
33.
TABLE 2.10:
Statement
1. 6 1 and 6 2 form a linear pair m6 1 = m6 2
2. 6 1 and 6 2 are supplementary
3. m6 1 + m6 2 = 180
4. m6 1 + m6 1 = 180
5. 2m6 1 = 180
6. m6 1 = 90
7. 6 1 is a right angle
28
Reason
Given
Linear Pair Postulate
Definition of Supplementary
Substitution
Simplify
Division PoE
Definition of a right angle
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TABLE 2.11:
Statement
1. ACBD, 6 1
=6 4
2. m6 1 = m6 4
3. 6 ACB and 6 ACD are right angles
4. m6 ACB = 90
m 6 ACD = 90
5. m6 1 + m6 2 = m6 ACB
m 6 3 + m6 4 = m6 ACD
6. m6 1 + m6 2 = 90
m 6 3 + m6 4 = 90
7. m6 1 + m6 2 = m6 3 + m6 4
8. m6 1 + m6 2 = m6 3 + m6 1
9. m6 2 = m6 3
10. 6 2
=6 3
Reason
Given
TABLE 2.12:
Statement
1. 6 MLN
= 6 OLP
2. m6 MLN = m6 OLP
3. m6 MLO = m6 MLN + m6 NLO
m 6 NLP = m6 NLO + m6 OLP
4. m6 NLP = m6 NLO + m6 MLN
5. m6 NLP = m6 MLO
6. 6 NLP
= 6 MLO
Reason
Given
TABLE 2.13:
Statement
1. AEEC, BEED
2. 6 BED is a right angle
6 AEC is a right angle
3. m6 BED = 90
m 6 AEC = 90
4. m6 BED = m6 2 + m6 3
m 6 AEC = m6 1 + m6 2
Reason
Given
lines create right angles
2.5. Geometry - Second Edition, Proofs about Angle Pairs and Segments, Review Answers
www.ck12.org
Reason
Substitution
Substitution
Subtraction PoE
TABLE 2.14:
Statement
1. 6 L is supplementary to 6 M
6 P is supplementary to 6 O
6 L
=6 O
2. m6 L = m6 O
3. m6 L + m6 M = 180
m 6 P + m6 O = 180
4. m6 L + m6 M = m6 P + m6 O
5. m6 L + m6 M = m6 P + m6 L
6. m6 M = m6 P
7. 6 M
=6 P
Reason
Given
TABLE 2.15:
Statement
1. 6 1
=6 4
2. m6 1 = m6 4
3. 6 1 and 6 2 are a linear pair
6 3 and 6 4 are a linear pair
4. 6 1 and 6 2 are supplementary
6 3 and 6 4 are supplementary
5. m6 1 + m6 2 = 180
m 6 3 + m6 4 = 180
6. m6 1 + m6 2 = m6 3 + m6 4
7. m6 1 + m6 2 = m6 3 + m6 1
8. m6 2 = m6 3
9. 6 2
=6 3
Reason
Given
TABLE 2.16:
Statement
1. 6 C and 6 F are right angles
2. m6 C = 90 , m6 F = 90
30
Reason
Given
Definition of a right angle
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Reason
Addition of real numbers
Substitution
TABLE 2.17:
Statement
1. lm
2. 6 1 and 6 2 are right angles
3. 6 1
=6 2
Reason
Given
lines create right angles.
Right Angles Theorem
TABLE 2.18:
Statement
1. m6 1 = 90
2. 6 1 and 6 2 are a linear pair
3. 6 1 and 6 2 are supplementary
4. m6 1 + m6 2 = 180
5. 90 + m6 2 = 180
6. m6 2 = 90
Reason
Given
Definition of a linear pair
Linear Pair Postulate
Definition of supplementary angles
Substitution
Subtraction PoE
TABLE 2.19:
Statement
1. lm
2. 6 1 and 6 2 make a right angle
3. m6 1 + m6 2 = 90
4. 6 1 and 6 2 are complementary
Reason
Given
lines create right angles
Definition of a right angle
Definition of complementary angles
TABLE 2.20:
Statement
1. lm, 6 2
=6 6
2. m6 2 = m6 6
3. 6 5
=6 2
6
4. m 5 = m6 2
5. m6 5 = m6 6
Reason
Given
31
2.5. Geometry - Second Edition, Proofs about Angle Pairs and Segments, Review Answers
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35.
32
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D
F
H
B
I
C
G
A
J
E
33
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C HAPTER
Chapter Outline
3.1
3.2
3.3
34
3.4
3.5
3.6
3.7
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17.
19.
20.
21.
22.
18.
Fold the paper so that the lines match up and the crease passes through the point you drew.
Same as number 19.
One way to do this is to use the edges of the ruler as guide lines. The sides of the ruler are parallel.
Use the ruler to draw a line. Turn the ruler perpendicular to the first line (make sure it is perpendicular by
matching up a marking on the ruler to the original line. Use the ruler edge to draw the perpendicular line.
35
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23. Parallel lines are evident in the veins of the leaves of ferns and the markings on some animals and insects.
Parallel planes are illustrated by the surface of a body of water and the bottom.
24. Trees are usually perpendicular to the ground. Each leaf of a fern is perpendicular to the stem.
25. Some branches of trees are skew.
26. Any two equations in the form y = b, where b is a constant.
27. Any two equations in the form x = b, where b is a constant.
28. These two lines are parallel to each other.
36
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Supplementary
Congruent
Congruent
Supplementary
Congruent
Supplementary
Supplementary
Same Side Interior
Alternate Interior
None
Same Side Interior
Vertical Angles
Corresponding Angles
Alternate Exterior
None
6 1, 6 3, 6 6, 6 9, 6 11, 6 14, and 6 16
x = 70 , y = 90
x = 15 , y = 40
x = 9 , y = 26
x = 21 , y = 17
x = 25
y = 18
x = 20
x = 31
y = 12
See the following table:
TABLE 3.1:
Statement
1. l || m
2. 6 1
=6 5
3. m6 1 = m6 5
4. 6 1 and 6 3 are supplementary
5. m6 1 + m6 3 = 180
6. m6 3 + m6 5 = 180
7. 6 3 and 6 5 are supplementary
Reason
Given
Corresponding Angles Postulate
TABLE 3.2:
Statement
1. l || m
Reason
Given
37
Reason
Corresponding Angles Postulate
Vertical Angles Theorem
Transitive PoC
TABLE 3.3:
Statement
1. l || m
2. 6 4 and 6 6 are supplementary
3. m6 4 + m6 6 = 180
4. 6 2
= 6 6, 6 4
=6 8
6
6
5. m 2 = m 6, m6 4 = m6 8
6. m6 2 + m6 8 = 180
7. 6 2 and 6 8 are supplementary
Reason
Given
Same Side Interior Angles Theorem
Definition of Supplementary Angles
Corresponding Angles Postulate
TABLE 3.4:
Statement
1. l || m, s || t
2. 6 4
= 6 12
6
3. 12
= 6 10
4. 6 4 = 6 10
Reason
Given
Corresponding Angles Postulate
Corresponding Angles Postulate
Transitive PoC
TABLE 3.5:
Statement
1. l || m, s || t
2. 6 2
= 6 13
3. 6 13
= 6 15
6
4. 2 = 6 15
Reason
Given
Alternate Exterior Angles Theorem
Corresponding Angles Postulate
Transitive PoC
TABLE 3.6:
Statement
1. l || m, s || t
2. 6 6
=6 9
6
3. 4
=6 7
4. 6 6 and 6 7 are supplementary
38
Reason
Given
Alternate Interior Angles Theorem
Vertical Angles Theorem
Same Side Interior Angles
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Reason
Same Angle Supplements Theorem
39
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2. This question could be considered a trick question, because you are still copying two congruent angles, not
two supplementary ones, like asked. Indicate the consecutive interior angles with arc marks, but copy the
adjacent angle to the one that was copied in # 14.
3. Given, 6 1
= 6 3, Given, 6 2
= 6 3, Corresponding Angles Theorem, Transitive Property
4. Given, 6 1 = 6 3, Given, 6 2
= 6 3, l || m
5. Give, Converse of the Alternate Interior Angles Theorem, Given, Converse of the Alternate Interior Angles
Theorem, Parallel Lines Property
6. See the following table:
TABLE 3.7:
Statement
1. m l, n l
2. m6 l = 90 , m6 2 = 90
3. m6 1 = m6 2
4. m || n
Reason
Given
Definition of Perpendicular Lines
Transitive Property
Converse of Corresponding Angles Theorem
TABLE 3.8:
Statement
1. 6 1
=6 3
2. m || n
40
Reason
Given
Converse of Alternate Interior Angles Theorem
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Reason
Linear Pair Postulate
Substitution
Definition of Supplementary Angles
TABLE 3.9:
Statement
1. 6 2
=6 4
2. m || n
3. 6 1
=6 3
Reason
Given
Converse of Corresponding Angles Theorem
Alternate Interior Angles Theorem
TABLE 3.10:
Statement
1. 6 2
=6 3
2. m || n
3. 6 1
=6 4
Reason
Given
Converse of Corresponding Angles Theorem
Alternate Exterior Angles Theorem
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
none
yes, AK || LJ by Converse of Consecutive Interior Angles Theorem
yes, LG || KD by Converse of Corresponding Angles Theorem
none
none
yes, AD || GJ by Converse of Alternate Interior Angles Theorem
58
73
107
58
49
107
49
x = 30
x = 15
x = 12
x = 26
x = 5
Construction, the first and last lines are parallel. You might conjecture that two lines perpendicular to the same
line are parallel to each other.
29. You could prove this using any of the converse theorems learned in this section because all four angles
formed where the transversal intersects the two parallel lines are right angles. Thus, Alternate Interior Angles,
Alternate Exterior Angles and Corresponding Angles are all congruent and the Same Side Interior Angles are
supplementary.
30. These two angles should be supplementary if the lines are parallel.
41
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90
90
45
16
72
84
41
24
78
90
126
54
180
not
not
90
34
56
90
56
134
134
34
See the following table:
TABLE 3.11:
Statement
1. l m, l n
2. 6 1 and 6 2 are right angles
3. m6 1 = 90 , m6 2 = 90
4. m6 1 = m6 2
5. 6 1
=6 2
6. m || n
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
42
x = 12
x = 9
x = 13.5
x = 8
x = 4
x = 30
Reason
Given
Definition of perpendicular lines
Definition of right angles
Transitive PoE
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1
3
-1
2
7
-2
4
undefined
Perpendicular
8. Parallel
9. Perpendicular
43
3.5. Geometry - Second Edition, Parallel and Perpendicular Lines in the Coordinate Plane, Review Answers
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10. Neither
11. Perpendicular
12. Parallel
44
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13. Neither
14. Parallel
15. y = 5x 7
45
3.5. Geometry - Second Edition, Parallel and Perpendicular Lines in the Coordinate Plane, Review Answers
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16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
46
y = 32 x 5
y = 14 x + 2
y = 32 x + 1
y = 2x + 1
y = x 10
y = x 4
y = 13 x 4
y = 25 x + 7
x = 1
y=8
y = 3x + 13
Perpendicular y = 23 x + 2
y = 32 x 4
Parallel y = 15 x + 7
y = 15 x 3
Perpendicular y = x
y = x
Neither y = 2x + 2
y = 2x 3
: y = 43 x 1
||: y = 43 x + 5 41
: y = 3x 3
||: y = 13 x + 7
: y = 7
||: x = 3
: y = x 4
||: y = x + 8
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17.09 units
19.20 units
5 units
17.80 units
22.20 units
14.21 units
6.40 units
9.22 units
6.32 units
6.71 units
12 units
7 units
4.12 units
18.03 units
2.83 units
7.81 units
4 units
9 units
5.66 units
9.49 units
4.12 units
4.47 units
y = 21 x 3
y = 3x + 5
y = 23 x 4
y = 52 x + 8
(9, -4)
(8, -1)
y = 53 x 6, (0, 6)
47
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30. y = 2x + 1
31. There are 12 possible answers: (-27, 9), (23, 9), (-2, -16), (-2, 34), (-17, -11), (-17, 29), (13, -11), (13, 29),
(-22, 24), (-22, -6), (18, 24), and (18, -6)
32. 1. Graph the two lines. 2. Determine the slope of a perpendicular line to the two lines. 3. Use the slope
from #2 to count from one line to the next to find a point on each line that is also on a perpendicular line. 4.
Determine coordinates of the points from #3. 5. Plug the points from #4 into the distance formula and solve.
48
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m6 2 = 118
m6 3 = 90
m6 4 = 98
m6 5 = 28
m6 6 = 118
m6 7 = 128
m6 8 = 52
m6 9 = 62
49
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C HAPTER
Chapter Outline
50
4.1
4.2
4.3
4.4
4.5
4.6
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43
121
41
86
61
51
13
60
70
118
68
116
161
141
135
a = 68 , b = 68 , c = 25 , d = 155 , e = 43.5 , f = 111.5
See the following table:
TABLE 4.1:
Statement
1. Triangle with interior and exterior angles.
2. m6 1 + m6 2 + m6 3 = 180
3. 6 3 and 6 4 are a linear pair, 6 2 and 6 5 are a linear
pair, and 6 1 and 6 6 are a linear pair
4. 6 3 and 6 4 are supplementary, 6 2 and 6 5 are
supplementary, and 6 1 and 6 6 are supplementary
5. m6 1 + m6 6 = 180 , m6 2 + m6 5 = 180
m 6 3 + m6 4 = 180
6. m6 1 + m6 6 + m6 2 + m6 5 + m6 3 + m6 4 = 540
7. m6 4 + m6 5 + m6 6 = 360
Reason
Given
Triangle Sum Theorem
Definition of a linear pair
Linear Pair Postulate
TABLE 4.2:
Statement
1. 4ABC with right angle B
2. m6 B = 90
3. m6 A + m6 B + m6 C = 180
4. m6 A + 90 + m6 C = 180
5. m6 A + m6 C = 90
6. 6 A and 6 C are complementary
Reason
Given
Definition of a right angle
Triangle Sum Theorem
Substitution
Subtraction PoE
Definition of complementary angles
51
52
x = 14
x = 9
x = 22
x = 17
x = 12
x = 30
x = 25
x = 7
x = 8
x = 17
x = 11
x = 7
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R
= 6 U, 6 A
= 6 G, 6 T
= 6 H, RA
= UG, AT
= GH, RT
= UH
6
6
6
6
6
B = T, I = O, G = P, BI = T O, IG = OP, BG = T P
Third Angle Theorem
90 , they are congruent supplements
Reflexive, FG
= FG
Angle Bisector
4FGI
= 4FGH
6 A
= 6 E and 6 B
= 6 D by Alternate Interior Angles Theorem
Vertical Angles Theorem
No, we need to know if the other two sets of sides are congruent.
AC
= CE and BC
= CD
4ABC = 4EDC
Yes, 4FGH
= 4KLM
No
Yes, 4ABE
= 4DCE
No
4BCD
= 4ZY X
CPCTC
m6 A = m6 X = 86 , m6 B = m6 Z = 52 , m6 C = m6 Y = 42
m6 A = m6 C = m6 Y = m6 Z = 35 , m6 B = m6 X = 110
m6 A = m6 C = 28 , m6 ABE = m6 DBC = 90 , m6 D = m6 E = 62
m6 B = m6 D = 153 , m6 BAC = m6 ACD = 15 , m6 BCA = m6 CAD = 12
See the following table:
6
TABLE 4.3:
Statement
1. 6 A
= 6 D, 6 B
=6 E
6
6
2. m A = m D, m6 B = m6 E
3. m6 A + m6 B + m6 C = 180
m 6 D + m6 E + m6 F = 180
4. m6 A + m6 B + m6 C = m6 D + m6 E + m6 F
5. m6 A + m6 B + m6 C = m6 A + m6 B + m6 F
6. m6 C = m6 F
7. 6 C
=6 F
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
Reason
Given
Transitive PoC
Reflexive PoC
Symmetric PoC
Reflexive PoC
4ABC is either isosceles or equiangular because the congruence statement tells us that 6 A
= 6 B.
53
29.
30. 4SMR
4SMT
4T
MA
4AMR
and 4SRA
=
=
=
= 4RAT
= 4AT S
= 4T SA
54
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4.3 Geometry - Second Edition, Triangle Congruence using SSS and SAS, Review Answers
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
Yes, 4DEF
= 4IGH
No, HJ and ED are not congruent because they have different tic marks
No, the angles marked are not in the same place in the triangles.
Yes, 4ABC
= 4RSQ
No, this is SSA, which is not a congruence postulate
No, one triangle is SSS and the other is SAS.
Yes, 4ABC
= 4FED
Yes, 4ABC
= 4Y XZ
AB = EF
AB
= HI
6 C
=6 G
6 C
=6 K
AB
= JL
AB
= ON
See the following table:
TABLE 4.4:
Statement
1. AB
= DC, BE
= CE
6
6
2. AEB = DEC
3. 4ABE
= 4ACE
Reason
Given
Vertical Angles Theorem
SAS
TABLE 4.5:
Statement
1. AB
= DC, AC
= DB
2. BC
= BC
3. 4ABC
= 4DCB
Reason
Given
Reflexive PoC
SSS
TABLE 4.6:
Statement
1. B is a midpoint of DC, ABDC
2. DB
= BC
3. 6 ABD and 6 ABC are right angles
4. 6 ABD
= 6 ABC
5. AB = AB
6. 4ABD
= 4ABC
Reason
Given
Definition of a midpoint
lines create 4 right angles
All right angles are
=
Reflexive PoC
SAS
55
4.3. Geometry - Second Edition, Triangle Congruence using SSS and SAS, Review Answers
18. See the following table:
TABLE 4.7:
Statement
1. AB is an angle bisector of 6 DAC,
AD
= AC
2. 6 DAB
= 6 BAC
3. AB = AB
4. 4ABD
= 4ABC
Reason
Given
Definition of an Angle Bisector
Reflexive PoC
SAS
TABLE 4.8:
Statement
1. B is the midpoint of DC, AD
= AC
2. DB = BC
3. AB
= AB
4. 4ABD
= 4ABC
Reason
Given
Definition of a Midpoint
Reflexive PoC
SSS
TABLE 4.9:
Statement
1. B is the midpoint of DE and AC, 6 ABE is a right
angle
2. DB
= BE, AB
= BC
3. m6 ABE = 90
4. m6 ABE = m6 DBC
5. 4ABE
= 4CBD
Reason
Given
Definition of a Midpoint
Definition of a Right Angle
Vertical Angle Theorem
SAS
TABLE 4.10:
Statement
1. DB is the angle bisector of 6 ADC,
AD
= DC
6
2. ADB
= 6 BDC
3. DB
= DB
4. 4ABD
= 4CBD
22.
23.
24.
25.
56
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Reason
Given
Definition of an Angle Bisector
Reflexive PoC
SAS
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26. Check the measures of the three sides in your triangle with your ruler to make sure that they are 5cm, 3cm and
2cm. If you are having trouble, follow the directions in investigation 4-2 using these lengths.
27. Match up your construction with the original to see if they are the same.
28. Your triangle should look like this.
29 and 30. These are the two triangles you should create in these two problems.
57
4.4. Geometry - Second Edition, Triangle Congruence using ASA, AAS, and HL, Review Answers www.ck12.org
4.4 Geometry - Second Edition, Triangle Congruence using ASA, AAS, and HL, Review
Answers
1. Yes, AAS, 4ABC FDE
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
=
Yes, ASA, 4ABC
= 4IHG
No
No
Yes, SAS, 4ABC
= 4KLJ
No
Yes, SAS, 4RQP
Yes, HL, 4ABC
= 4QPR
Yes, SAS, 4ABE
= 4DBC
No
No
Yes, ASA, 4KLM
= 4MNO
Yes, SSS, 4W ZY
= 4Y XW
Yes, AAS, 4W XY
= 4QPO
6 DBC
6
= DBA because they are both right angles.
6 CDB
= 6 ADB
DB = DB
See the following table:
TABLE 4.11:
Statement
1. DBAC,
DB is the angle bisector of 6 CDA
2. 6 DBC and 6 ADB are right angles
3. 6 DBC
= 6 ADB
4. 6 CDB = 6 ADB
5. DB
= DB
6. 4CDB
= 4ADB
Reason
Given
Definition of perpendicular
All right angles are
=
Definition of an angle bisector
Reflexive PoC
ASA
19. CPCTC
20. 6 L
= 6 O and 6 P
= 6 N by the Alternate Interior Angles Theorem
6
6
21. LMP = NMO by the Vertical Angles Theorem
22. See the following table:
TABLE 4.12:
Statement
1. LP || NO, LP
= NO
6
6
6
2. L = O, P = 6 N
3. 4LMP
= 6 OMN
23. CPCTC
24. See the following table:
58
Reason
Given
Alternate Interior Angles Theorem
ASA
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TABLE 4.13:
Statement
1. LP || NO, LP
= NO
6
6
6
2. L = O, P = 6 N
3. 4LMP
= 6 OMN
4. LM
MO
=
5. M is the midpoint of PN.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
Reason
Given
Alternate Interior Angles
ASA
CPCTC
Definition of a midpoint
A
=6 N
6 C
=6 M
PM
= MN
LM
= MO or LP
= NO
UT
= FG
SU
= FH
See the following table:
6
TABLE 4.14:
Statement
1. SV WU, T is the midpoint of SV and WU
2. 6 STW and 6 UTV are right angles
3. 6 STW
= 6 UTV
4. ST = TV ,W T
= TU
5. 4STW
= 4UTV
6. W S
= UV
Reason
Given
Definition of perpendicular
All right angles are
=
Definition of a midpoint
SAS
CPCTC
TABLE 4.15:
Statement
1. 6 K
= 6 T, EI is the angle bisector of 6 KET
2. 6 KEI
= 6 T EI
3. EI
EI
=
4. 4KEI
= 4T EI
5. 6 KIE
= 6 T IE
6. EI is the angle bisector of 6 KIT
Reason
Given
Definition of an angle bisector
Reflexive PoC
AAS
CPCTC
Definition of an angle bisector
59
4.5. Geometry - Second Edition, Isosceles and Equilateral Triangles, Review Answers
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1.
2.
3.
4.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
60
5.
x = 10, y = 7
x = 14
x = 13
x = 16
x = 7
x=1
y=3
y = 11 , x = 4
x = 25 , y = 19
x = 3, y = 8
Yes, 4ABC is isosceles. 4ABD is congruent to 4CBD by ASA. Therefore segments AB and BC are congruent
by CPCTC. Or, 6 A is congruent to 6 C by third angles theorem and thus the triangle is isosceles by the converse
of the Base Angles Theorem.
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a.
b.
c.
d.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
90
30
60
2
Always
Sometimes
Sometimes
Never
Always
a = 46 , b = 88 , c = 46 , d = 134 , e = 46 , f = 67 , g = 67
See the following table:
TABLE 4.16:
Statement
1. Isosceles 4CIS, with base angles 6 C and 6 SIO is
the angle bisector of 6 CIS
2. 6 C
=6 S
6
3. CIO
= 6 SIO
4. IO
= IO
5. 4CIO
= 4SIO
6. CO
= OS
7. 6 IOC
= 6 IOS
6
8. IOC and 6 IOS are supplementary
9. m6 IOC = m6 IOS = 90
10. IO is the perpendicular bisector of CS
Reason
Given
Base Angles Theorem
Definition of an Angle Bisector
Reflexive PoC
ASA
CPCTC
CPCTC
Linear Pair Postulate
Congruent Supplements Theorem
Definition of a bisector (Steps 6 and 9)
TABLE 4.17:
Statement
1. Equilateral 4RST with RT
= ST
= RS
2. 6 R
=6 S
3. 6 S
=6 T
4. 6 R
=6 T
5. 4RST is equilangular
Reason
Given
Base Angles Theorem
Base Angles Theorem
Transitive PoC
Definition of an Equiangular 4
TABLE 4.18:
Statement
1. Isosceles 4ICS with 6 C and 6 S, IO is the perpendicular bisector of CS
2. 6 C
=6 S
3. CO
= OS
4. m6 IOC = m6 IOS = 90
5. 4CIO
= 4SIO
Reason
Given
Base Angle Theorem
Definition of a bisector
Definition of a bisector
ASA
61
4.5. Geometry - Second Edition, Isosceles and Equilateral Triangles, Review Answers
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Reason
CPCTC
Definition of an Angle Bisector
TABLE 4.19:
Statement
1. Isosceles 4ABC with base angles 6 B and 6 C,
Isosceles 4XY Z with base angles 6 Y and 6 Z, 6 C
=
6 Z, BC
= YZ
2. 6 B
= 6 C, 6 Y
=6 Z
6
3. 6 B
Y
=
4. 4ABC
= 4XY Z
Reason
Given
29. Construct a 60 angle, then extend one side. The adjacent angle is 120 .
30. In investigations 3-2 and 3-3 you learned how to construct perpendiculars (i.e. 90 angles). You could make a
90 angle and copy your 30 onto it to make 120 . See investigation 1-2 for a review of copying an angle.
31. Method 1: Construct a 90 angle and bisect it. Method 2: Construct a 30 angle, bisect the 30 angle and copy
the resulting 15 angle onto the original 30 to make a total of 45 .
62
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One leg and the hypotenuse from each are congruent, 4ABC
= 4Y XZ
63
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C HAPTER
Relationships with
Triangles, Answer Key
Chapter Outline
5.1
5.2
5.3
5.4
5.5
5.6
5.7
64
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RS = TU = 6
TU = 8
x = 5, TU = 10
x=4
No, we cannot say that the triangles are congruent. We do not know any angle measures.
y = 18
x = 12
x = 5.5
x=6
x = 14, y = 24
x = 6, z = 26
x = 5, y = 3
x = 1, z = 11
a. 53
b. 106
c. The perimeter of the larger triangle is double the perimeter of the midsegment triangle.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
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26.
a. M(1, 3), N(5, 2), O(2, 1);
b. slope of MN and AC = 41 , slope of NO and AB = 12 , and slope of MO and BC = 2;
y1 +y3
y1 +y2
2 2
x1 +x3
x1 +x2
2 2
y3 y2
x3 x2
= slope of AT
y1 + y3 y1 + y2 2
x1 + x3 x1 + x2 2
29. length of LM =
+
2
2
2
2
s
2
2
x3 x2
y3 y2
=
+
2
2
r
1
1
(x3 x2 )2 + (y3 y2 )2
=
4
q4
1
2
= 2 (x3 x2 ) + (y3 y2 )2 = 12 AT
30. We have just proven algebraically that the midsegment (or segment which connects midpoints of sides in a
triangle) is parallel to and half the length of the third side.
s
66
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1.
2.
3.
4. Yes, but for #2, the circumcenter is not within the triangle.
5. For acute triangles, the circumcenter is inside the triangle. For right triangles, the circumcenter is on the
hypotenuse. For obtuse triangles, the circumcenter is outside the triangle.
6. By the definition of a perpendicular bisector, all three sides are bisected and therefore each half is congruent
and all six triangles are right triangles. Then, by the definition of a circumcenter, the distance from it to each
vertex is congruent (the hypotenuses of each triangle). Therefore, all 6 triangles are congruent by HL.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
x = 16
x=8
x=5
x = 12
x = 31
x = 34
a. AE = EB, AD = DB
67
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b. No, AC 6= CB
c. Yes, AD = DB
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21-25. drawing
68
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26.
27.
28. The perpendicular bisector of one side in a triangle is the set of all points equidistant from the endpoints of
that side. When we find the perpendicular bisector of a second side, we find all the points equidistant from
the endpoints of the second side (one of which is an endpoint of the first side as well). This means that the
intersection of these two lines is equidistant from all three vertices of the triangle. The segments connecting
this point (the circumcenter) to each vertex would be the radius of the circumscribed circle.
29. Fill in the blanks: There is exactly one circle which contains any three points.
30. See the following table:
TABLE 5.1:
Statement
6. CD = CD
Reason
Given
Definition of a perpendicular bisector
Definition of a midpoint
Definition of a perpendicular bisector
Definition of right angles
Reflexive PoC
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8. AC = CB
Reason
SAS
CPCTC
TABLE 5.2:
Statement
1. 4ABC is a right isosceles triangle and BD is the
bisector of AC
2. D is the midpoint of AC
3. AD
= DC
4. AB
= BC
5. BD
= BD
6. 4ABD and 4CBD are congruent.
Reason
Given
Definition of a perpendicular bisector
Definition of a midpoint
Definition of Isosceles Triangle
Reflexive Property of Congruence
SSS
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TABLE 5.3:
Statement
1. AD
= DC
6
6
BD bisects 6 ABC
18.
19.
20.
21.
Reason
Given
The shortest distance from a point to a line is perpendicular.
Definition of perpendicular lines
All right angles are congruent
Reflexive PoC
HL
CPCTC
Definition of an angle bisector
Incenter
Circumcenter
Circumcenter
Incenter
22-25. In an equilateral triangle the circumcenter and the incenter are the same point.
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27. slope of BA is -2 and slope of BC is 21 . The rays are perpendicular because their slopes are opposite reciprocals.
32. BD is the angle bisector of 6 ABC. Since ADAB and CDCB, 4DAB and 4DCB are right triangles. Since
we have shown that AB
= BC and we know BD
= BD by the reflexive property, 4DAB
= 4DCB by HL. Thus,
6 ABD = 6 CBD by CPCTC. Now we can conclude that BD is the angle bisector of 6 ABC by definition of an
angle bisector.
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TABLE 5.4:
Statement
1. 4ABC
= 4DEF, AP and DO are altitudes
2. AB = DE
3. 6 P and 6 O are right angles
4. 6 P
=6 O
6
5. ABC
= 6 DEF
6. 6 ABC and 6 ABP are a linear pair
6 DEF and 6 DEO are a linear pair
7. 6 ABC and 6 ABP are supplementary
6 DEF and 6 DEO are supplementary
8. 6 ABP
= 6 DEO
9. 4APB
= 4DOE
10. AP = DO
Reason
Given
CPCTC
Definition of an altitude
All right angles are congruent
CPCTC
Definition of a linear pair
Linear Pair Postulate
Congruent Supplements Theorem
AAS
CPCTC
73
5.4. Geometry - Second Edition, Medians and Altitudes in Triangles, Review Answers
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TABLE 5.5:
Statement
1. Isosceles 4ABC with legs AB and AC
BDDC and CEBE
2. 6 DBC
= 6 ECB
3. 6 BEC and 6 CEB are right angles
4. 6 BEC
= 6 CEB
5. BC = BC
6. 4BEC
= 4CDB
7. BD
= CE
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
M(2, 5)
y = 2x + 1
N(1, 3)
y = 4x + 1
intersection (0, 1)
Centroid
(1, -1)
(1, 3)
74
Reason
Given
x1 +x2 y1 +y2
,
2 , 2
using the third vertex, the centroid is
x +x2
x3 +2( 1 2
3
y +y2
y3 +2( 1 2
3
=
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AB, BC, AC
BC, AB, AC
AC, BC, AB
6 B, 6 A, 6 C
6 B, 6 C, 6 A
6 C, 6 B, 6 A
No, 6 + 6 < 13
No, 1 + 2 = 3
Yes
Yes
No, 23 + 56 < 85
Yes
1 < 3rd side <17
11 < 3rd side <19
12 < 3rd side <52
Both legs must be longer than 12
0 < x < 10.3
m6 1 > m6 2 because 7 > 6
IJ, IG, GJ, GH, JH
m6 1 < m6 2, m6 3 > m6 4
a=b
a>b
a<b
d<a<e<c<b
a=b<d<e<c
x < 18
x>3
m6 C < m6 B < m6 A because AB < AC
SAS theorem doesnt apply here since the angle is not between the pair of congruent sides.
Since the median AB bisects the side CT ,CB
= BT . By the reflexive property, AB
= AB. If CA > AT , then we
can use the SSS Inequality Theorem to conclude that m6 ABT < m6 ABC. Since m6 ABT and m6 ABC are also
a linear pair and must be supplementary, the smaller angle must be acute. Hence, 6 ABT is acute.
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76
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BE
AE
AH
CE
AG
The point of concurrency is the circumcenter and use Investigation 5-1 to help you. The circle should pass
through all the vertices of the triangle (inscribed triangle).
The point of concurrency is the incenter and use Investigation 5-2 to help you. The circle should touch all the
sides of the triangle (inscribed circle).
The point of concurrency is the centroid and it is two-thirds of the medians length from the vertex (among
other true ratios). It is also the balancing point of a triangle.
The point of concurrency is called the orthocenter. The circumcenter and the orthocenter can lie outside a
triangle when the triangle is obtuse.
x 7 < third side < 3x + 5
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C HAPTER
Polygons and
Quadrilaterals, Answer Key
Chapter Outline
78
6.1
6.2
6.3
G EOMETRY - S ECOND E DITION , P ROVING Q UADRILATERALS ARE PARALLEL OGRAMS , R EVIEW A NSWERS
6.4
6.5
6.6
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TABLE 6.1:
# of sides
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
# of 4s from one
vertex
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
4s 180 (sum)
180
360
540
720
900
1080
1260
1440
1620
1800
Each angle in a
regular ngon
60
90
108
120
128.57
135
140
144
147.27
150
2340
3780
26
20
157.5
165
30
10
360
18
30
17
24
10
11
x = 60
x = 90 , y = 20
x = 35
y = 115
x = 105
x = 51 , y = 108
x = 70 , y = 70 , z = 90
x = 72.5 , y = 107.5
x = 90 , y = 64
x = 52 , y = 128 , z = 123
larger angles are 135
smallest angle is 36
x = 117.5
79
360
180 n180 n+360
=
n
n
360
360
=
n
n
31. a = 120 , b = 60 , c = 48 , d = 60 , e = 48 , f = 84 , g = 120 , h = 108 , j = 96
80
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24. EF = HG = 17; FG = EH = 29; lengths of opposite sides are the same (congruent).
25. A quadrilateral in the coordinate plane can be show to be a parallelogram by showing any one of the three
properties of parallelograms shown in questions 22-24.
26. See the following table:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
TABLE 6.2:
Statement
1. ABCD is a parallelogram with diagonal BD
2. AB || DC, AD || BC
3. 6 ABD
= 6 BDC, 6 ADB
= 6 DBC
4. DB = DB
5. 4ABD
= 4CDB
6
6. 6 A
C
=
Reason
Given
Definition of a parallelogram
Alternate Interior Angles Theorem
Reflexive PoC
ASA
CPCTC
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TABLE 6.3:
Statement
1. ABCD is a parallelogram with diagonals BD and AC
2. AB || DC, AD || BC
3. 6 ABD
= 6 BDC, 6 CAB
= 6 ACD
DC
4. AB
=
5. 4DEC
= 4BEA
6. AE
= EC, DE
= EB
Reason
Given
Definition of a parallelogram
Alternate Interior Angles Theorem
Opposite Sides Theorem
ASA
CPCTC
TABLE 6.4:
Statements
1. ABCD is a parallelogram
2. m6 1 = m6 3 and m6 2 = m6 4
3. m6 1 + m6 2 + m6 3 + m6 4 = 360
4. m6 1 + m6 2 + m6 1 + m6 2 = 360
5. 2(m6 1 + m6 2) = 360
6. m6 1 + m6 2 = 180
29.
30.
31.
32.
82
w = 135
x = 16
y = 105
z = 60
Reasons
Given
Opposite angles congruent in parallelogram
Sum of angles in quadrilateral is 360
Substitution
Simplification
Division POE
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Yes
Yes
Yes
No
No
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
No
No
x=5
x = 8 , y = 10
x = 4, y = 3
Yes
Yes
No
See the following table:
TABLE 6.5:
Statement
1. 6 A
= 6 C, 6 D
=6 B
2. m6 A = m6 C, m6 D = m6 B
3. m6 A + m6 B + m6 C + m6 D = 360
4. m6 A + m6 A + m6 B + m6 B = 360
5. 2m6 A + 2m6 B = 360
2m 6 A + 2m6 D = 360
6. m6 A + m6 B = 180
m 6 A + m6 D = 180
7. 6 A and 6 B are supplementary
6 A and 6 D are supplementary
8. AD || BC, AB || DC
9. ABCD is a parallelogram
Reason
Given
TABLE 6.6:
Statement
1. AE
= EC, DE
= EB
6
2. AED
= 6 BEC
6 DEC
= 6 AEB
Reason
Given
Vertical Angles Theorem
83
6.3. Geometry - Second Edition, Proving Quadrilaterals are Parallelograms, Review Answers
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4AEB = 4CED
4. AB
= DC, AD
= BC
5. ABCD is a parallelogram
Reason
SAS
CPCTC
Opposite Sides Converse
TABLE 6.7:
Statement
1. 6 ADB
= 6 CBD, AD
= BC
2. AD || BC
3. ABCD is a parallelogram
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
see graph
-2
3 5
see graph
The triangle is formed by the midsegments of the triangle formed when the parallelograms overlap. Four
congruent triangles are formed within this center triangle, which is also congruent to the three outer triangles.
Reason
Given
Alternate Interior Angles Converse
Theorem 5-10
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28.
29.
30.
31.
parallelogram
slope of W X = slope of Y Z = 3; slope of XY = slope of ZW = 12 opposite sides parallel
midpoint of diagonal YW is (1.5, 3.5); midpoint of diagonal XZ is (1.5, 3.5); midpoints bisect each other
Each side of the parallelogram is parallel to the diagonal. For example, XY || DU || ZW , so opposite sides
are parallel. They are also half the length of the diagonal so opposite sides are congruent. Either proves that
W XY Z is a parallelogram.
85
6.4. Geometry - Second Edition, Rectangles, Rhombuses and Squares, Review Answers
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13
26
24
10
90
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
12
21.4
11
54
90
a.
b.
c.
d.
90
90
45
45
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
86
x = 45 , y = 90 , z = 2 2
x = y = 13, w = z = 25
See the following table:
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TABLE 6.8:
Statements
1. ABCD is a rectangle
2. BW
= WC, AY
= Y D, BX
= XA, CZ
= ZD
3. BD = AC
4. XY is a midsegment in 4ABD
ZY is a midsegment in 4ACD
XW is a midsegment in 4ABC
W Z is a midsegment in 4BCD
5. XY = 21 BD = W Z and XW = 12 AC = Y Z
6. 12 BD = 12 AC
7. XY = W Z = Y Z = XW
8. W XY Z is a rhombus
Reasons
1. Given
2. Definition of a midpoint
3. Diagonals are congruent in a rectangle
4. Definition of a midsegment in a triangle
28. Answers may vary. The quadrilateral inscribed in the rhombus will always be a rectangle because the diagonals
of a rhombus are perpendicular and the opposite sides of the inscribed quadrilateral will be parallel to the
diagonals and thus perpendicular to one another.
29. Answers may vary. First, the square is a rhombus, the inscribed quadrilateral will be a rectangle (see problem
28). Second, the diagonals of the square are congruent so the sides of the inscribed quadrilateral will be
congruent (see problem 27). Since the sides of the inscribed quadrilateral are perpendicular and congruent the
parallelogram is a square.
30.
Start by drawing a segment 2 inches long. Construct the perpendicular bisector of this segment. Mark off
points on the perpendicular bisector .75 inches from the point of intersection. Connect these points to the
endpoint of your original segment.
31.
There are an infinite number of rectangles with diagonals of length 3 inches. The picture to the left shows
three possible rectangles. Start by drawing a segment 3 inches long. Construct the perpendicular bisector of
the segment to find the midpoint. Anchor your compass at the midpoint of the segment and construct a circle
which contains the endpoints of your segment (radius 1.5 inches). Now you can draw a second diameter to
87
6.4. Geometry - Second Edition, Rectangles, Rhombuses and Squares, Review Answers
your circle and connect the endpoints to form a rectangle with diagonal length 3 inches.
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55
125
90
110
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
50
50
90
25
115
2.
3. No, if the parallel sides were congruent, then it would be a parallelogram. By the definition of a trapezoid, it
can never be a parallelogram (exactly one pair of parallel sides).
4. Yes, the diagonals do not have to bisect each other.
5. Construct two perpendicular lines to make the diagonals. One diagonal is bisected, so measure an equal length
on either side of the point of intersection on one diagonal. Mark this as two vertices. The other two vertices
are on the other diagonal. Place them anywhere on this diagonal and connect the four points to create the kite.
Answers will vary.
6. 33
7. 28
8. 8
9. 11
10. 37
11. 5
12. x = 4
13. x = 5, y = 73
14. x = 11, y = 17
15. y = 5
16. y = 45
17. x = 12 , y = 8
18. parallelogram
19. square
20. kite
21. trapezoid
22. None
23. isosceles trapezoid
24. rectangle
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25. rhombus
26. See the following table:
TABLE 6.9:
Statement
1. KE
= T E and KI
= TI
2. EI = EI
3. 4EKI
= 4ET I
4. 6 KES
= 6 T ES and 6 KIS
= 6 T IS
5. EI is the angle bisector of 6 KET and 6 KIT
Reason
Given
Reflexive PoC
SSS
CPCTC
Definition of an angle bisector
TABLE 6.10:
Statement
1. KE
= T E and KI
= TI
2. 4KET and 4KIT are isosceles triangles
3. EI is the angle bisector of 6 KET and 6 KIT
4. EI is the perpendicular bisector of KT
5. KT EI
Reason
Given
Definition of isosceles triangles
Theorem 6-22
Isosceles Triangle Theorem
TABLE 6.11:
Statement
1. T RAP is an isosceles trapezoid with T R || AP
2. T P
= RA
3. AP = AP
4. 6 T PA
= 6 RAP
5. 4T PA
= 4RAP
6. TA = RP
Reason
Given
Definition of isosceles trapezoid
Reflexive PoC
Base angles congruent in isosceles trapezoid
SAS
CPCTC
29. The sides of the parallelogram inscribed inside a kite will be parallel to the diagonals because they are
triangle midsegments. Since the diagonals in a kite are perpendicular, the sides of the parallelogram will
be perpendicular as well. The diagonals in a kite are not congruent so only opposite sides of the parallelogram
will be congruent and thus preventing the parallelogram from being a square.
30. Since the diagonals are congruent and the sides of the inscribed parallelogram are half the length of the
diagonals they are parallel to (because they are triangle midsegments), they are all congruent. This makes the
inscribed parallelogram a rhombus.
90
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1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Never
Always
Always
Sometimes
Sometimes
Never
Always
Sometimes
TABLE 6.12:
Opposite
sides ||
Diagonals
Opposite
sides
=
Opposite angles
=
Diagonals
=
No
No
No
No,
base
6 s
=
Non-vertex
6 s
Yes
All 6 s
=
Yes
All 6 s
=
No
Yes
Trapezoid
Isosceles
Trapezoid
Kite
One set
One set
Diagonals
bisect each
other
No
No
No
No
Yes
No
Non-parallel
sides
No
Parallelogram
Rectangle
Rhombus
Square
Both sets
Both sets
Both sets
Both sets
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
All sides
=
All sides
=
No
No
Yes
No
Yes
91
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C HAPTER
Chapter Outline
7.1
7.2
7.3
7.4
7.5
7.6
7.7
7.8
92
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14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
4:3
5:8
6:19
6:8:5
2:1
1:3
2:1
1:1
5:4:3
x = 18 , angles are 54 , 54 , 72
x = 3; 9, 12, 15
x = 4; 12, 20
x = 16; 64, 112
X = 4; 20, 36
x = 4; 12, 44
a+b
c+d
b = d
d(a + b) = b(c + d)
ad + bd = bc + bd
ad = bc
ab
cd
b = d
d(a b) = b(c d)
ad bd = bc bd
ad = bc
x = 12
x = 5
y = 16
x = 12, 12
y = 21
z = 3.75
x = 13.9 gallons
The president makes $800,000, vice president makes $600,000 and the financial officer makes $400,000.
1 32 cups water
60 marshmallows; 6 cups miniatures
False
True
True
False
28
18
7
24
93
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94
True
False
False
False
True
True
False
True
IG
BG
BI
6 B
= AT
= HT
= 6 H, 6 I
= 6 A, 6 G
= 6 T, HA
3
5
5 or 3
HT = 35
IG = 27
57, 95, 35 or 53
m6 E = 113 , m6 Q = 112
3
2
3 or 2
12
21
6
18
No, 32
26 6= 12
Yes, 4ABC 4NML
Yes, ABCD STUV
Yes, 4EFG 4LMN
x = 12, y = 15
31
x = 20, y = 7
14.6
a 7.4, b = 9.6
X = 6, y = 10.5
121
1:3
30u2 , 270u2 , 1 : 9, this is the ratio of the lengths squared or
1 2
3 .
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4T RI
T R, T I, AM
12
6
6, 12
4ABE 4CDE because 6 BAE
= 6 DCE and 6 ABE
= 6 CDE by the Alternate Interior Angles Theorem.
AE
BE
Answers will vary. One possibility: CE = DE
One possibility: 4AED and 4BEC
AC = 22.4
Only two angles are needed because of the 3rd Angle Theorem.
Congruent triangles have the same shape AND size. Similar triangles only have the same shape. Also,
congruent triangles are always similar, but similar triangles are not always congruent.
Yes, right angles are congruent and solving for the missing angle in each triangle, we find that the other two
angles are congruent as well.
FE = 43 k
k = 16
right, right, similar
Yes, 4DEG 4FDG 4FED
Yes, 4HLI 4HKJ
No only vertical angles are congruent
Yes, they are to the same line.
Yes, the two right angles are congruent and 6 OEC and 6 NEA are vertical angles.
x = 48 f t.
Yes, we can use the Pythagorean Theorem to find EA. EA = 93.3 f t.
70 ft
29 ft 2 in
24 ft
Answers will vary. Check your answer by considering whether or not it is reasonable.
27.
28. m6 1 + m6 2 = 90 , therefore m6 GDF = m6 2 and m6 EDF = 6 1. This shows that the three angles in each
triangle are congruent to the three corresponding angles in each of the other triangles. Thus, they are all
similar.
29. DF
30. GD
31. FE
95
7.4. Geometry - Second Edition, Similarity by SSS and SAS, Review Answers
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96
AB = BC = 11.25, AC = 3, DE = EF = 5, DF = 2
AB
BC
AC
3
DE = EF = DF = 2
Yes, 4ABC 4DEF by SSS similarity.
slope of CA = slope of LO = undefined (vertical); slope of AR = slope of OT = 0 (horizontal).
90 , vertical and horizontal lines are perpendicular.
T O = 6, OL = 8,CA = 4 and AR = 3; LO : CA = OT : AR = 2 : 1
Yes, by SAS similarity.
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1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
TABLE 7.1:
Statement
and AC || XD
2. 6 BAC
= 6 CAD
6
6
3. X = BAC
4. 6 CAD
= 6 ADX
6
6
5. X = ADX
6. 4XAD is isosceles
7. AX
= AD
8. AX = AD
BA
BC
9. AX
= CD
Reason
Given
Definition of an angle bisector
Corresponding Angles Postulate
Alternate Interior Angles Theorem
Transitive PoC
Base Angles Converse
Definition of an Isosceles Triangle
Congruent segments are also equal
Theorem 7-7
97
98
Reason
Substitution PoE
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(2, 6)
(-8, 12)
(4.5, -6.5)
k = 23
k=9
k = 21
20, 26, 34
2 23 , 3, 5
k = 52
14
k = 11
original: 20, dilation: 80, ratio: 4:1
If k = 1, then the dilation is congruent to the original figure.
A0 (6, 12), B0 (9, 21),C0 (3, 6)
A0 (9, 6), B0 (3, 12),C0 (0, 7.5)
15.
16. k = 2
17. A00 (4, 8), B00 (48, 16),C00 (40, 40)
18. k = 2
19.
a. 5
b.
5
c. 3 5
d. 2 5
e. 4 5
20.
a. 5
5
b. 10 5
c. 20 5
99
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21.
a. OA : OA0 = 1 : 2
AB : A0 B0 = 1 : 2
b. OA : OA00 = 1 : 4
AB : A00 B00 = 1 : 4
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
22.
x=3
y = 2x + 1
(3, 7)
This point is the center of the dilation.
The scale factor is 3.
28.
0 O0
0 G0
0 D0
29. DDO
= 3, OOG
= 3 and GGD
= 3.
30. 3
31. To dilate the original figure by a scale factor of 4 make one additional tick mark with your compass.
32. To dilate the original figure by a scale factor of 12 construct the perpendicular bisectors of CG,CO and CD to
find the midpoints of the segments which will be your G0 , O0 and D0 respectively.
100
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TABLE 7.2:
Stage 0
Stage 1
Stage 2
Stage 3
Stage 4
Stage 5
Number of Segments
1
2
4
8
16
32
1
3
1
9
1
27
1
81
1
243
2
3
4
9
8
27
16
81
32
243
1
3n
units.
5.
1
6. Number of edges: 192 Edge length: 27
Perimeter:
192
27
7.
8. See the following table:
TABLE 7.3:
Color
No Color
Stage 0
0
1
Stage 1
1
8
Stage 2
9
64
Stage 3
73
512
101
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9. Answers will vary. Many different flowers (roses) and vegetables (broccoli, cauliflower, and artichokes) are
examples of fractals in nature.
10. Answers will vary.
102
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x = 10 ; 50 , 60 , 70
3.75 gallons
yes
no
yes, AA
yes, SSS
no
no
A0 (10.5, 3), B0 (6, 13.5),C0 (1.5, 6)
x = 19
3
x=1
z=6
a = 5, b = 7.5
103
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C HAPTER
Right Triangle
Trigonometry, Answer Key
Chapter Outline
8.1
8.2
G EOMETRY - S ECOND E DITION , C ONVERSE OF THE P YTHAGOREAN T HEO REM , R EVIEW A NSWERS
8.3
8.4
8.5
104
8.6
8.7
8.8
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505
9 5
799
12
10
10 14
26
3p 41
2
2
x + y
9 2
yes
no
no
yes
yes
no
20 39
14 429
17 287
4
4 5
493
5 10
36.6 20.6
33.6
25.2
3 2
4 s
16 3
a2 + 2ab + b2
c2 + 4 21 ab = c2 + 2ab
a2 + 2ab + b2 = c2 + 2ab, which simplifies to a2 + b2 = c2
1
1 2
2
2 (a +
b)(a 1+ b) = 2 (a1 + 2ab + b )
1
2 2 ab + 2 c = ab + 2 c
1 2
1
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2 (a + 2ab + b ) = ab + 2 c a + 2ab + b = 2ab + c , which simplifies to a + b = c
105
8.2. Geometry - Second Edition, Converse of the Pythagorean Theorem, Review Answers
www.ck12.org
17. obtuse
106
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18. One way is to use the distance formula to find the distances of all three sides and then use the converse of the
Pythagorean Theorem. The second way would be to find the slope of all three sides and determine if two sides
are perpendicular.
19. c = 13
20. d = 194
21. The sides of 4ABC are a multiple of 3, 4, 5 which is a right triangle. 6 A is opposite the largest side, which is
the hypotenuse, making it 90 .
22. See the following table:
TABLE 8.1:
Statement
1. In 4ABC, a2 + b2 < c2 , and c is the longest side. In
4LMN, 6 N is a right angle.
2. a2 + b2 = h2
3. c2 > h2
4. c > h
5. 6 C is the largest angle in 4ABC.
6. m6 N = 90
7. m6 C > m6 N
8. m6 C > 90
9. 6 C is an obtuse angle.
10. 4ABC is an obtuse triangle.
23.
24.
25.
26.
Reason
Given
Pythagorean Theorem
Transitive PoE
Take the square root of both sides
The largest angle is opposite the longest side.
Definition of a right angle
SSS Inequality Theorem
Transitive PoE
Definition of an obtuse angle.
Definition of an obtuse triangle.
right
obtuse
acute
(1, 5), (-2, -3)
27 and 28. answers vary, you can check your answer by plotting the points on graph paper and measuring with a
protractor or using the distance formula to verify the appropriate inequality.
29 and 30. While your diagram may be different because your angle at A may be different, the construction should
look something like this:
107
8.2. Geometry - Second Edition, Converse of the Pythagorean Theorem, Review Answers
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31. The sum of the angles in a triangle must be 180 , if 6 C is 90 , then both 6 A and 6 B are acute.
32. You could construct a line perpendicular to AB through 6 B (you will need to extend the segment beyond B to
do the construction). Next, select any point on this perpendicular segment and call it C. By connecting A and
C you will make 4ABC.
108
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z = 14 5
8 41
17. x = 32
5 , y = 5 , z = 2 41
18. x = 9,
y = 3 34
19. x = 9 20481 , y = 81
40 , z = 40
20. See the following table:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
TABLE 8.2:
Statement
1. 4ABD with ACDB and 6 DAB is a right angle.
2. 6 DCA and 6 ACB are right angles
3. 6 DAB
= 6 DCA
= 6 ACB
6
6
4. D = D
5. 4CAD
= 4ABD
6
6
6. B = B
7. 4CBA
= 4ABD
8. 4CAD
= 4CBA
Reason
Given
Definition of perpendicular lines.
All right angles are congruent.
Reflexive PoC
AA Similarity Postulate
Reflexive PoC
AA Similarity Postulate
Transitive PoC
TABLE 8.3:
Statement
1. 4ABD with ACDB and 6 DAB is a right angle.
2. 4ABD 4CBA 4CAD
AB
3. BC
AB = DB
Reason
Given
Theorem 8-5
Corresponding sides of similar triangles are proportional.
109
8.3. Geometry - Second Edition, Using Similar Right Triangles, Review Answers
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
6.1%
10.4%
9.4%
ratios are 31 and 93 , which both reduce to the common ratio 3. Yes, this is true for the next pair of terms since
27
9 also reduces to 3.
geometric mean; geometric mean
10
20
1
See the following table:
TABLE 8.4:
Statement
a
b
1. ae = d+e
and db = d+e
2. a2 = e(d + e) and b2 = d(d + e)
3. a2 + b2 = e(d + e) + d(d + e)
4. a2 + b2 = (e + d)(d + e)
5. c = d + e
6. a2 + b2 = c2
110
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Reason
Theorem 8-7
Cross-Multiplication Property
Combine equations from #2.
Distributive Property
Segment Addition Postulate
Substitution PoE
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x 2
x
3, 2x
15 2
11 2
8
90 2or 127.3 ft.
a = 2 2, b = 2
c = 6 2, d
= 12
e = f =13 2
g = 10 3, h= 20
k = 8, j= 8 3
x = 11 3, y = 22 3
m = 9, n= 18
q = 14 6, p= 28 3
s = 9,t = 3 3
x = w
=9 2
a = 9 3, b = 18 3
p = 6 15, q = 6 5
Yes, its a 30-60-90 triangle.
No, it isnot even a right triangle.
16 + 6 3
8 + 8 3
x
:x 3
4 2 in
3
3 in
2
25
2
4 3 f t
27
2
3 in
2
12
3960
ft
s
3
2
111
8.5. Geometry - Second Edition, Tangent, Sine and Cosine, Review Answers
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112
d
f
f
e
f
d
d
e
d
e
f
e
D, D
equal, complement
reciprocals
0.4067
0.7071
28.6363
0.6820
sin A = 45 , cos A = 53 , tan A = 43
2
sin A = 2 , cos A = 2 2 , tan A = 1
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23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.7
31.0
44.7
39.4
46.6
36.9
34.6
82.9
70.2
m6 A =
38 , BC = 9.38, AC = 15.23
AB = 4 10, m6 A = 18.4 , m6 B = 71.6
BC = 51, m6 A = 45.6, m6 C =
44.4
m6 A = 60
, BC = 12, AC = 12 3
CB = 7 5, m6 A = 48.2 , m6 B = 41.8
m6 B = 50 , AC = 38.14, AB = 49.78
You would use a trig ratio when given a side and an angle and the Pythagorean Theorem if you are given two
sides and no angles.
47.6
1.6
44.0
192
11 f t 17 f t 5 in; 54
51
For problem 20: since the earth tilts on its axis, the position of the sun in the sky varies throughout the year
for most places on earth. Thus, the angle at which the sun hits a particular object will vary at different times
of the year. For problem 21: the water pressure in the hose will affect the path of the water, the more pressure,
the longer the water will travel in a straight path before gravity causes the path of the water to arc and come
back down towards the ground.
Tommy used OA instead of OA for his tangent ratio.
Tommy used the correct ratio in his equation here, but he used the incorrect angle measure he found previously
which caused his answer to be incorrect. This illustrates the benefit of using given information whenever
possible.
Tommy could have used Pythagorean Theorem to find the hypotenuse instead of a trigonometric ratio.
cos 50
sin 20
As the angle measures increase, the sine value increases.
As the angle measures increase, the cosine value decreases.
The sine and cosine values are between 0 and 1.
tan 85 = 11.43, tan 89 = 57.29, and tan 89.5 = 114.59. As the tangent values get closer to 90 , they get
larger and larger. There is no maximum, the values approach infinity.
The sine and cosine ratios will always be less than one because the denominator of the ratios is the hypotenuse
which is always longer than either leg. Thus, the numerator is always less than the denominator in these ratios
resulting in a value less than one.
113
8.7. Geometry - Second Edition, Extension: Laws of Sines and Cosines, Review Answers
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114
m6 B = 84 , a = 10.9, b = 13.4
m6 B = 47 , a = 16.4, c = 11.8
m6 A = 38.8 , m6 C = 39.2 , c = 16.2
b = 8.5, m6 A = 96.1 , m6 C = 55.9
m6 A = 25.7 , m6 B = 36.6, m6 C = 117.7
m6 A = 81 , m6 B = 55.4 , m6 C = 43.6
b = 11.8, m6 A = 42 , m6 C = 57
b = 8.0, m6 B = 25.2 , m6 C = 39.8
m6 A = 33.6 , m6 B = 50.7 , m6 C = 95.7
m6 C = 95 , AC = 3.2, AB = 16.6
BC = 33.7, m6 C = 39.3 , m6 B = 76.7
m6 A = 42 , BC = 34.9, AC = 22.0
m6 B = 105 , m6 C = 55 , AC = 14.1
m6 B = 35 , AB = 12, BC = 5
Yes, BC would still be 5 units (see isosceles triangle below); the measures of 6 C are supplementary as shown
below.
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6
BC = 4.4,
AC = 10.0, m A = 26
AB = 5 10, m6 A = 18.4 , m6 B = 71.6
6
BC = 6 7, m6 A = 41.4
, m C = 48.6
m6 A = 30
, AC = 25 3, BC = 25
BC = 7 13, m6 A = 31 , m6 B
= 59
m6 B = 45 , AC = 32, AB = 32 2
m6 B = 63 , BC = 19.1, AB = 8.7
m6 C =
19 , AC = 22.7, AB = 7.8
BC = 4 13, m6 B = 33.7 , m6 C = 56.3
acute
right, Pythagorean triple
obtuse
right
acute
obtuse
x = 2
x = 2 110
x=6 7
2576.5 ft.
x = 29.2
AC = 16.1, m6 A = 41.6 , m6 C = 63.4
m6 A = 123.7 , m6 B = 26.3 , m6 C = 30
115
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C HAPTER
Chapter Outline
116
9.1
9.2
9.3
9.4
9.5
G EOMETRY - S ECOND E DITION , A NGLES OF C HORDS , S ECANTS , AND TAN GENTS , R EVIEW A NSWERS
9.6
G EOMETRY - S ECOND E DITION , S EGMENTS OF C HORDS , S ECANTS , AND TAN GENTS , R EVIEW A NSWERS
9.7
9.8
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diameter
secant
chord
point of tangency
common external tangent
common internal tangent
center
radius
the diameter
4 lines
11. 3 lines
12. none
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
E =2
117
9.1. Geometry - Second Edition, Parts of Circles and Tangent Lines, Review Answers
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
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yes
4 10
4 11
x=9
x=3
x = 5
x=8 2
a.
b.
c.
d.
TABLE 9.1:
Statement
1. AB and CB with points of tangency at A and C. AD
and DC are radii.
2. AD
= DC
3. DAAB and DCCB
4. m6 BAD = 90 and m6 BCD = 90
5. Draw BD.
6. 4ADB and 4DCB are right triangles
7. DB
= DB
8. 4ABD
= 4CBD
9. AB
= CB
Reason
Given
All radii are congruent.
Tangent to a Circle Theorem
Definition of perpendicular lines
Connecting two existing points
Definition of right triangles (Step 4)
Reflexive PoC
HL
CPCTC
29.
a. kite
b. center, bisects
30. AT
= BT
= CT
= DT by theorem 10-2 and the transitive property.
31. 9.23
8
32. 8 ;
3 3 3
33. Since AW and W B both share point W and are perpendicular to VW because a tangent is perpendicular to the
radius of the circle. Therefore A, B and W are collinear. V T
= VW because they are tangent segments to circle
A from the same point, V , outside the circle. Similarly, VW
= VU because they are tangent segments to circle
B from V . By the transitive property of congruence, V T
= VU. Therefore, all three segments are congruent.
118
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minor
major
semicircle
major
minor
semicircle
c
c
yes, CD
= DE
66
228
yes, they are in the same circle with equal central angles
yes, the central angles are vertical angles, so they are equal, making the arcs equal
no, we dont know the measure of the corresponding central angles.
90
49
82
16
188
172
196
270
x = 54
x = 47
x = 25
J J
A= B
62
77
139
118
257
319
75
105
68
105
255
217
119
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2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
120
AC
c
DF
c
JF
DE
6 HGC
6 AGC
AG, HG,CG, FG, JG, DG
107
8
118
133
140
120
x = 64 , y = 4
x = 8,
y = 10
x = 3 26, y 12.3
x=9 5
x = 9, y = 4
x = 4.5
x=3
x = 7
x = 4 11
c = 121.3
mAB
c = 112.9
mAB
c
c by Theorem 10-5.
BF
= FD and BF
= FD
CA = AF by Theorem 10-6.
QS is a diameter by Theorem 10-4.
a-c shown in the diagram below; d. it is the center; e. shown in the diagram; this construction is not done to
scale and your chords might be in different places but this should give you an idea of what it should look like.
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(1, 5)
m = 0, m is undefined
x=1
for BC:
a. 92 , 23
b. m = 7, m = 71
c. y = 17 x + 15
7
e. Point of intersection (center of the circle) is (1, 2).
f. radius is 5 units
31.
a. 120
b. 60
121
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48
120
54
45
87
27
100.5
95.5
76.5
84.5
51
46
x = 180 , y = 21
x = 60 , y = 49
x = 30 , y = 60
x = 72 , y = 92
x = 200 , y = 100
x = 68 , y = 99
x = 93 , y = 97
x = 10
x = 24
x = 74 , y = 106
x = 35 , y = 35
55
70
110
90
20
90
TABLE 9.2:
Statement
1. Inscribed 6 ABC and diameter BD
m6 ABE = x and m6 CBE = y
2. x + y = m6 ABC
3. AE
= EB and EB
= EC
4. 4AEB and 4EBC are isosceles
5. m6 EAB = x and m6 ECB = y
6. m6 AED = 2x and m6 CED = 2y
c = 2x and mDC
c = 2y
7. mAD
c + mDC
c = mAC
c
8. mAD
c = 2x + 2y
9. mAC
c = 2(x + y )
10. mAC
c = 2m6 ABC
11. mAC
122
Reason
Given
Angle Addition Postulate
All radii are congruent
Definition of an isosceles triangle
Isosceles Triangle Theorem
Exterior Angle Theorem
The measure of an arc is the same as its central angle.
Arc Addition Postulate
Substitution
Distributive PoE
Subsitution
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Reason
Division PoE
TABLE 9.3:
Statement
c
1. 6 ACB and 6 ADB intercept AB
c
2. m6 ACB = 12 mAB
1
c
m 6 ADB = 2 mAB
6
6
3. m ACB = m ADB
4. 6 ACB
= 6 ADB
Reason
1. Given
2. Inscribed Angle Theorem
3. Transitive Property
4. Definition of Congruence
c so mDB
c This makes D the midpoint of CB.
c
c and m6 CAB = 1 mCB,
c = 1 mCB.
Also, m6 DOB = mDB
2
2
123
9.5. Geometry - Second Edition, Angles of Chords, Secants, and Tangents, Review Answers
1.
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a.
b.
c.
2. No, by definition a tangent line cannot pass through a circle, so it can never intersect with any line inside of
one.
3.
a.
b.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
124
center, equal
inside, intercepted
on, half
outside, half
x = 103
x = 25
x = 100
x = 44
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12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
x = 38
x = 54.5
x = 63 , y = 243
x = 216
x = 42
x = 150
x = 66
x = 113
x = 60, y = 40 , z = 80
x = 60 , y = 25
x = 35 , y = 55
x = 75
x = 45
x = 35 , y = 35
x = 60
x = 47 , y = 78
x = 84 , y = 156
x = 10
x = 3
See the following table:
TABLE 9.4:
Statement
1. Intersecting chords AC and BD.
2. Draw BC
3.
4.
5.
6.
m6
m6
m6
m6
c
DBC = 12 mDC
1 c
ACB = 2 mAB
a = m6 DBC + m6 ACB
c + 1 mAB
c
a = 1 mDC
2
Reason
Given
Construction
TABLE 9.5:
Statement
Reason
Given
Construction
c
3. m6 BEC = 12 mBC
9.5. Geometry - Second Edition, Angles of Chords, Secants, and Tangents, Review Answers
126
Reason
Inscribed Angle Theorem
Exterior Angle Theorem
Subtraction PoE
Substitution
Distributive Property
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x = 1.5
x = 12
x = 7.5
x=6 2
x = 10
x = 10
x=8
x=9
x = 22.4
x = 11
x = 20
x = 120
7 17.14
x = 4 66
x = 6
x=
231
x = 4 42
x = 10
The error is in the set up. It should be 10 10 = y (15 + y). The correct answer is y = 5.
10 inches
x=7
x=5
x=3
x=3
x=8
x=6
x=2
x=8
x=2
x = 12, y = 3
127
9.7. Geometry - Second Edition, Extension: Writing and Graphing the Equations of Circles, Reviewwww.ck12.org
Answers
(x 2)2 + (y 3)2 = 52
(x 10)2 + y2 = 29
(x + 3)2 + (y 8)2 = 200
(x 6)2 + (y + 6)2 = 325
7
37
a-d. bisector of AB is y = 24
x + 24
, bisector of BC is y = x + 8 (e) center of circle (-5, 3) (f) radius 25
2
2
(g) (x + 5) + (y 3) = 625
15. (x 2)2 + (y 2)2 = 25
16. (x + 3)2 + (y 1)2 = 289
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
128
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I
A
D
G
C
B
H
E
J
F
129
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C HAPTER
Chapter Outline
10.1
10.2
10.3
130
10.4
10.5
10.6
G EOMETRY - S ECOND E DITION , A REA AND P ERIMETER OF R EGULAR P OLY GONS , R EVIEW A NSWERS
10.7
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A = 144 in2 , P = 48 in
A = 144 cm2 , P = 50 cm
A = 360 m2
A = 112 u2 , P = 44 u
A = 324 f t 2 , P = 72 f t
P = 36 f t
A = 36 in2
A = 210 cm2
6m
Possible answers: 10 6, 12 4
Possible answers: 9 10, 3 30
If the areas are congruent, then the figures are congruent. We know this statement is false, #11 would be a
counterexample.
8 2 cm
P 54.9
cm
A = 96 2 135.8 cm2
15 in
P 74.3 in
A = 180 in2
315 units2
90 units2
14 units2
407.5 units2
560 units2
30 units2
814 units2
72 units2
72 units2
24 acres
64
12 24
3
h = 3 3, A = 9
h = 5 3, A = 25 3
2
h = 2x 3, A = x4 3
x = 20 f t, y = 60 f t
Perimeter is 16 units, Area is 15 square units
131
10.2. Geometry - Second Edition, Trapezoids, Rhombi, and Kites, Review Answers
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3. 44s
4 21 12 d1 12 d2
4
8 d1 d2
1
2 d1 d2
4. 24s + 24s
2 12 12 d1 x + 2 12 12 d1 (d2 x)
1
1
1
2 d1 x + 2 d1 d2 2 d1 x
1
2 d1 d2
5. 160 units2
6. 315 units2
7. 96 units2
2
8. 77 units
9. 100 3 units2
10. 84 units2
11. 1000 units2
12. 63 units2
13. 62.5 units2
14. A = 480 units2
P = 104 units
15. A = 36 1 + 3 units2
P = 12 2 + 2 units
2
16. A = 108 units
P = 12 3 + 2 units
17. A = 5 3 5 + 77 units2
P = 52 units
132
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26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
2
2
Trapezoid, 47.5
units units
rhombus, 12 5 units2
8, 14
9, 12
192 units2
a. 200 f t 2
b. 400 f t 2
c. 21
32.
a. 300 f t 2
b. 900 f t 2
c. 31
133
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134
9
25
1
16
49
4
36
121
1
6
2
9
7
3
5
12
1
4
1
2
5 units2
24 units
100 cm
468.75 cm2
96 units2
198 f t 2
54 in
32 units
4
9
2
3
Diagonals are 12 and 16. The length of the sides are 12 2 and 16 2.
Because
the diagonals of these rhombi are congruent, the rhombi are actually squares.
25 2
2.34 inches
1
Scale: 192
, length of model 5.44 inches
27.5 by 20 cm, yes because the drawing is 10.8 by 7.87 inches
9 by 6 inches
10 by 14 inches
Baby Bella $0.05, Mama Mia $0.046, Big Daddy $0.046, the Mama Mia or Big Daddy are the best deals.
1.5 bottles, so shell need to buy 2 bottles.
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diameter
15
8
6
84
18
25
2
36
radius
7.5
4
3
42
9
12.5
1
18
Circumference
15
8
6
84
18
25
2
36
r = 44
in
C = 20 cm
16
Thediameter is the same length as the diagonals of the square.
32 2
16
9
80
15
r = 108
r = 30
r = 72
120
162
15
40 125.7 in.
a. 26 81.7 in
b. 775 complete rotations
26. The Little Cheese, 3.59:1; The Big Cheese, 3.49:1; The Cheese Monster, 3.14:1; Michael should buy The
Little Cheese
27. 31 gumdrops
28. 18 in
29. 93 in
30. 30 ft
135
10.5. Geometry - Second Edition, Areas of Circles and Sectors, Review Answers
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10.5 Geometry - Second Edition, Areas of Circles and Sectors, Review Answers
TABLE 10.2:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
136
radius
2
4
5
12
9
3 10
17.5
Area
4
16
25
144
81
90
306.25
30
49
900
36
54
1.0416
189
2.6 4 3
33
20.25
40.5
8 3
2
15
120
10
198
123.61
292.25
1033.58
13.73
21.21
54.4
Square 10, 000 f t 2 ; Circle 12, 732 f t 2 ; the circle has more area.
18 units
40
circumference
4
8
10
24
18
6 10
35
14
60
12
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apothem
6
equilateral
10cm
5 3 cm
60 cm
150 3
A = 384 3
P = 96
A=8 2
P = 6.12
A = 68.26
A = 72
A = 688.19
P = 100
A = 73.47
P = 15.45
A = 68.26
P = 63
6.5
12
a = 11.01
a = 14.49
93.86, 94.15
30 94.25
The perimeter of the 40-gon is closer to the circumference because it is closer in shape to the circle. The more
sides a polygon has, the closer it is to a circle.
695.29, 703.96
225 706.86
The area of the 40-gon is closer to the area of the circle because it is closer in shape to the circle than the
20-gon.
Start with 21 asn. n = 6, so all the internal triangles are equilateral triangles with
sides s.Therefore the apothem
3
3 s (s)(6). Reducing this
1
is
s from the 30-60-90 ratio. Plugging this in for n and a, we have A =
2
we end up with A = 3 2 3 s2 .
26.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
sin x2 = 2rs ; cos x2 = ar
s = 2r sin 2x
a = r cos x2
1
x
x
2r
sin
r
cos
= r2 sin
2
2
2
x
x
2
nr sin 2 cos 2
x
2
cos
x
2
10.6. Geometry - Second Edition, Area and Perimeter of Regular Polygons, Review Answers
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ns2 cos( x )
We can reduce this to 4 sin x2 .
(2)
2
33. 16055.49 cm
34. 4478.46 in2
138
x
2
cos
x
2
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139
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C HAPTER
11
Chapter Outline
11.1
11.2
11.3
11.4
11.5
11.6
11.7
11.8
140
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V =8
F =9
E = 30
F =6
E =6
V =6
F =9
V =6
Yes, hexagonal pyramid. F = 7,V = 7, E = 12
No, a cone has a curved face.
Yes, hexagonal prism. F = 8,V = 12, E = 18
No a hemisphere has a face.
Yes, trapezoidal prism. F = 6,V = 8, E = 12
Yes, concave decagonal prism. F = 10,V = 16, E = 24
Rectangle
Circle
Trapezoid
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
Regular Icosahedron
Decagonal Pyramid
Trapezoidal Prism
All 11 nets
141
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142
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9 f t.2
10, 000 cm2
triangles, A = 6
The rectangles are 3 6, 4 6, and 6 5. Their areas are 18, 24, and 30.
72
84
Lateral surface area is the area of all the sides, total surface area includes the bases.
rectangle, 2rh
a. 96 in2
b. 192 in2
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
350 cm2
1606.4
390.2
486
182
34
2808
x=8
x = 40
x = 25
60 in2
4100 cm2
The height could be 1, 3, 5, or 15.
4060 f t 2
2940 f t 2
5320 f t 2
22 gal
$341
5 in by 4 + 1 in, 20 + 5 in2 67.83 in2
x2 16 in2 , x = 25 in
5 2
2 x , x = 8
143
11.3. Geometry - Second Edition, Surface Area of Pyramids and Cones, Review Answers
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vertex
y
lateral edge
w
z
t
7.
8. 5 10 cm
9. 15 in
10. To find the slant
height, we need to find the distance from the center of the edge of the equilateral triangle.
This distance is 3.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
144
3 = l 2 l = 39
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29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
24
175
10 in
13 in
360 in2
145
11.4. Geometry - Second Edition, Volume of Prisms and Cylinders, Review Answers
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146
882 cm3
3960
902.54
4580.44
147
50.27
7776
x=7
x = 24
x = 32
294 in3
24000 cm3
75 m3
330, 000 f t.3
165, 000 f t.3
495, 000 f t.3
36891.56 cm3
15901.92 cm3
r = 3 cm, h = 12 cm
11 cm
300.44 in3
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9680
1280
778.71
3392.92
400
396.55
5277.88
128
1884.96
100.53
113.10
188.50
42
200
1066.67
9 3
2
6
18
2
1 3
s
2
12
Find
the volume of one square pyramid then multiply it by 2.
72 3
1 3
2
3s
h = 13.5 in
h = 3.6 cm
r = 3 cm
112 in3
190.87 cm3
471.24 cm3
h = 9 m, r = 6 m
15 ft
147
11.6. Geometry - Second Edition, Surface Area and Volume of Spheres, Review Answers
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28.
148
SA = 2r2 + 2rh
SA = 4r2
SA = 4r2
They are the same. Think back to the explanation for the formula for the surface area of a sphere using
the baseball-it is really the sum of the area of four circles. For the cylinder, the SA is the sum of the areas
of the two circular bases and the lateral area. The lateral area is 2rh, when we replace h with r this part
of the formula becomes the area of two more circles. That makes the total surface area of the cylinder
equal to the area of four circles, just like the sphere.
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a. 24429 in3
b. 732.87 lbs
c. 50 in
29. 25,132.74 miles
30. 201 million square miles
31. 268 billion cubic miles
149
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150
42
No, 14
10 6= 35
Yes, the scale factor is 4:3.
Yes, the scale factor is 3:5.
No, the top base is not in the same proportion as the rest of the given lengths.
Yes, cubes have the same length for each side. So, comparing two cubes, the scale factor is just the ratio of
the sides.
1:16
8:343
125:729
8:11
5:12
87.48
The volume would be 43 or 64 times larger.
4:9
60 cm
91125 m3
2:3
4:9
y = 8, x= h = 12
w = 4 5, z = 6 5
Vs = 170.67,V
l = 576
LAs = 16 5, LAl = 36 5
Yes, just like the cubes spheres and hemispheres only have a radius to compare. So, all spheres and hemispheres are similar.
49:144, 343:1728
98, 288
The ratio of the lateral areas is 49:144, which is the same as the ratio of the total surface area.
9:25, about 2.78 times as strong
27:125
Animal A, Animal Bs weight is about 4.63 times the weight of animal A but his bones are only 2.78 times as
strong.
81 sq in
small $0.216, large $0.486
8:27
The larger can for $2.50 is a better deal. Using the cost of the canning material and the ratio of the volume of
beans, the equivalent cost of producing the larger can is $2.62. If we just use the volume of bean ratio (as a
consumer would) the cost should be $2.87. Both of these are higher than the $2.50 price.
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F
K
G
A
E
D
J
B
L
C
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I
H
G
A
B
D
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151
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C HAPTER
12
Rigid Transformations,
Answer Key
Chapter Outline
12.1
12.2
12.3
12.4
12.5
12.6
12.7
152
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sometimes
always
always
never
sometimes
never
never
always
always
sometimes
a kite that is not a rhombus
a circle
an isosceles trapezoid
n
15.
16.
17.
18. none
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
19.
H is the only one with rotational symmetry, 180 .
line symmetry
rotational symmetry
line symmetry
line symmetry (horizontal)
rotational symmetry
153
154
2 lines
6 lines
4 lines
180
60 , 120 , 180 , 240 , 300
90 , 180 , 270
none
120 , 240
40 , 80 , 120 , 160 , 200 , 240 , 280 , 320
8 lines of symmetry; angles of rotation: 45 , 90 , 135 , 180 , 225 , 270 , and 315
3 line of symmetry; angles of rotation: 120 , 240
1 line of symmetry; no rotational symmetry
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A vector has direction and size, a ray is part of a line, so it has direction, but no size.
A0 (1, 6)
B0 (9, 1)
C(0, 6)
A00 (4, 15)
D(7, 16)
A000 (9, 24)
All four points are collinear.
A0 (8, 14), B0 (5, 17),C0 (7, 5)
A0 (5, 3), B0 (8, 6),C0 (6, 6)
A0 (6, 10), B0 (3, 13),C0 (5, 1)
A0 (11, 1), B0 (8, 2),C0 (10, 10)
(x, y) (x 6, y + 2)
(x, y) (x + 9, y 7)
(x, y) (x 3, y 5)
(x, y) (x + 8, y + 4)
22.
23.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
24.
D0 (9, 9), E 0 (12, 7), F 0 (10, 14)
Q0 (9, 6),U 0 (6, 0), A0 (1, 9), D0 (2, 15)
h3, 8i
h9, 12i
h0, 7i
(x, y) (x 7, y + 2)
(x, y) (x + 11, y + 25)
(x, y) (x + 15, y 9)
155
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d
p
(-3, 2), (-8, 4), (-6, 7), (-4, 7)
(-6, 4), (-2, 6), (-8, 8)
(2, 2), (8, 3), (6, -3)
(2, 6), (-6, 2), (4, -2)
(2, -2), (8, -6)
(2, -4), (-4, 2), (-2, -6)
(2, 3), (4, 8), (7, 6), (7, 4)
(4, 6), (6, 2), (8, 8)
(2, 4), (-4, 3), (-2, 9)
(-4, -14), (4, -10), (-6, -6)
(-2, -2), (-6, -8)
(-4, 2), (2, -4), (-6, -2)
y = 2
yaxis
y=x
18-20.
156
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30.
31. Perpendicular Bisector
32.
157
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1.
2.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
158
3.
d
d, they are the same because the direction of the rotation does not matter.
270
90
Not rotating the figure at all; 0
(-6, -2)
(-6, -4)
(2, -2) and (6, 4)
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12.
13.
14.
15.
159
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
x=3
x = 4.5
x = 21
90
180
180
24-26.
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161
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162
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11.
12.
13. Answers will vary.
163
164
C
E
A
F
J
B
H
D
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G
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