Difference between revisions of "Angle bisector"
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* [[Stewart's Theorem]] | * [[Stewart's Theorem]] | ||
Revision as of 16:51, 27 February 2014
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For an angle , the (internal) angle bisector of is the line from B such that the angle between this line and is equal to the angle between this line and .
A given angle also has an external angle bisector, which lies entirely outside the angle. The two angle bisectors are perpendicular to each other.
Features of Angle Bisectors
- The angle bisectors are the locus of points which are equidistant from the two sides of the angle.
- A reflection about either angle bisector maps the two sides of the angle to each other.
- In a triangle, the Angle Bisector Theorem gives the ratio in which the angle bisector cuts the opposite side.
- In a triangle, the internal angle bisectors (which are cevians) all intersect at the incenter of the triangle. The internal angle bisector of one angle and the external angle bisectors of the other two angles all intersect at an excenter of the triangle.
See also
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