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Section 9.1 Points, Lines, Planes, and Angles

Section 9.1 Points, Lines, Planes, and Angles. What You Will Learn. Points Lines Planes Angles. Basic Terms. A point , line , and plane are three basic terms in geometry that are NOT given a formal definition, yet we recognize them when we see them. Lines, Rays, Line Segments.

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Section 9.1 Points, Lines, Planes, and Angles

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  1. Section 9.1Points, Lines, Planes, and Angles

  2. What You Will Learn • Points • Lines • Planes • Angles

  3. Basic Terms • A point, line, and plane are three basic terms in geometry that are NOT given a formal definition, yet we recognize them when we see them.

  4. Lines, Rays, Line Segments • A line is a set of points. • Any two distinct points determine a unique line. • Any point on a line separates the line into three parts: the point and two half lines. • A ray is a half line including the endpoint. • A line segment is part of a line between two points, including the endpoints.

  5. Description Diagram Symbol Line AB A B Ray AB B A Ray BA B A Line segment AB A B Basic Terms

  6. Plane • We can think of a plane as a two-dimensional surface that extends infinitely in both directions. • Any three points that are not on the same line (noncollinear points) determine a unique plane.

  7. Plane • Two lines in the same plane that do not intersect are called parallel lines.

  8. Plane • A line in a plane divides the plane into three parts, the line and two half planes.

  9. Plane • Any line and a point not on the line determine a unique plane. • The intersection oftwo distinct,non-parallelplanes is a line.

  10. Plane • Two planes that do not intersect are said to be parallel planes.

  11. Angles • An angle is the union of two rays with a common endpoint; denoted .

  12. Angles • The vertex is the point common to both rays. • The sides are the rays that make the angle. • There are several ways to name an angle:

  13. Angles • The measure of an angle is the amount of rotation from its initial to its terminal side. • Angles can be measured in degrees, radians, or gradients.

  14. Angles • Angles are classified by their degree measurement. Right Angle is 90º Acute Angle is less than 90º Obtuse Angle is greater than 90º but less than 180º Straight Angle is 180º

  15. Angles

  16. Types of Angles • Adjacent Angles - angles that have a common vertex and a common side but no common interior points. • Complementary Angles - two angles whose sum of their measures is 90 degrees. • Supplementary Angles - two angles whose sum of their measures is 180 degrees.

  17. Example 3: Determining Complementary Angles In the figure, we see that

  18. Example 3: Determining Complementary Angles Solution

  19. Example 3: Determining Supplementary Angles In the figure, we see that

  20. Example 3: Determining Supplementary Angles Solution

  21. Definitions • When two straight lines intersect, the nonadjacent angles formed are called Vertical angles. • Vertical angles have the same measure.

  22. Definitions • A line that intersects two different lines, at two different points is called a transversal.

  23. Definitions • Special names are given to the angles formed by a transversal crossing two parallel lines.

  24. Special Names Alternate interior angles 3 & 6; 4 & 5 Interior angles on the opposite side of the transversal–have the same measure 1 2 3 4 6 5 7 8 1 2 Alternate exterior angles 1 & 8; 2 & 7 Exterior angles on the opposite sides of the transversal–have the same measure 3 4 5 6 7 8 Corresponding angles 1 & 5, 2 & 6,3 & 7, 4 & 8 One interior and one exterior angle on the same side of the transversal–have the same measure 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

  25. Parallel Lines Cut by a Transversal • When two parallel lines are cut by a transversal, • 1. alternate interior angles have the same measure. • 2. alternate exterior angles have the same measure. • 3. corresponding angles have the same measure.

  26. Example 6: Determining Angle Measures The figure shows two parallel lines cut by a transversal. Determine the measure of through .

  27. Example 6: Determining Angle Measures Solution

  28. Example 6: Determining Angle Measures Solution

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