Christmas6 mins ago
How Do You Work This Out?
16 Answers
There's a square, and inside is an equilateral triangle with the sides the same length as the square (the base of the triangle is the bottom of the square). Need to calculate the angle from the bottom left square corner, to the top of the triangle to the top left square corner.
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The angle between the bottom left corner to the apex of the triangle is 30 degrees. (90 degrees - 60degrees)
The triangle bottom left corner of square to apex triangle to top left corner of the square is an isosceles triangle The side length of the equilateral triangle and the square are the same.
Therefore as the apex of the isosceles triangle = 30 degrees, the two base angles = (180 - 30)/2 = 150/2 = 75 degrees
It is easier to describe with a notated diagram
The angle between the bottom left corner to the apex of the triangle is 30 degrees. (90 degrees - 60degrees)
The triangle bottom left corner of square to apex triangle to top left corner of the square is an isosceles triangle The side length of the equilateral triangle and the square are the same.
Therefore as the apex of the isosceles triangle = 30 degrees, the two base angles = (180 - 30)/2 = 150/2 = 75 degrees
It is easier to describe with a notated diagram
Lets try again - the answer is still 75 degrees
Call the square clockwise from top left, ABCD and the apex of the triangle point E. You require angle DEA
Angle ADE = 30 degrees (90 - 60 = 30)
Triangle ADE is an isosceles triangle
Angles DAE and DEA are the base angles and equal (180 -30)/ 2 = 75 degrees
Call the square clockwise from top left, ABCD and the apex of the triangle point E. You require angle DEA
Angle ADE = 30 degrees (90 - 60 = 30)
Triangle ADE is an isosceles triangle
Angles DAE and DEA are the base angles and equal (180 -30)/ 2 = 75 degrees
Well...
First, I suspect the triangle is not an equilateral. Probably isosceles.
An equilateral triangle will not fit inside a square of the same length.
So the triangle DEA (using JJ's convention) has two short sides of 1 and 2 units. The hypotenuse is therefore Sq. Root(5) or 2.2 something.
The angle is thus arctan 2 (or arcsin (1/root [5]), which is equal to 1.107 radians or 63.435 degrees:
First, I suspect the triangle is not an equilateral. Probably isosceles.
An equilateral triangle will not fit inside a square of the same length.
So the triangle DEA (using JJ's convention) has two short sides of 1 and 2 units. The hypotenuse is therefore Sq. Root(5) or 2.2 something.
The angle is thus arctan 2 (or arcsin (1/root [5]), which is equal to 1.107 radians or 63.435 degrees: