Stage 15 · Triangles

15.1  Meeting the Triangle

Three sides, three angles, the sturdiest frame there is — and the rules they must obey.

Ages 11–14 · Reasoning, one step at a time
Knowledge point page

Point 6 of 6 in this lesson: 15.1.6 Heights, medians, and angle bisectors

15.1.6 Heights, medians, and angle bisectors

From any vertex you can draw three different special segments down into the triangle. Each is a kind of cevian — a segment from a vertex to the opposite side. There are three of each, but let's draw one of each from the same vertex A:

Three cevians from A: the altitude (perpendicular, slate), the median (to the midpoint, green ticks), and the bisector (equal angle arcs, amber). In a general triangle these are three different segments.
Don't mix them up

In most triangles the altitude, median, and bisector from one vertex are three separate lines landing at three different spots on the opposite side. They only merge into one segment in a special case — when the two sides from that vertex are equal (an isosceles triangle). We'll see exactly that collapse in Isosceles Triangles.

eastmath.com · 15.1 Meeting the Triangle · 15.1.6 Heights, medians, and angle bisectors