Primarygun Posted February 9, 2005 Posted February 9, 2005 For a triangle, 3 sides are given. What's the radius of its circumcircle? Are we able to get it without using cosine law or sine law or heron formula?
mezarashi Posted February 14, 2005 Posted February 14, 2005 My guess would be that if you could find the center of the triangle, then everything would be easy from there. THe radius would be the center to any vertex.
albertlee Posted February 14, 2005 Posted February 14, 2005 It depends on what kind of triangle you are dealing with.....
Primarygun Posted February 14, 2005 Author Posted February 14, 2005 A triangle with 7.5 cm , 12.5 cm and 10 cm. My teacher hasn't taught us cosine law or sine law or heron law. This question appears in a chapter of property of circle,simple properties of circle. I have learnt the above three laws so I can find a lot of method to solve it but I lack a method without using these untaught things.
grayfalcon89 Posted February 14, 2005 Posted February 14, 2005 Yes. You can find it without using Heron's Formula or Law of Cosine I belive.
mcoy Posted February 20, 2005 Posted February 20, 2005 how about making an accurate diagram and measuring the radius. it might work?
uncool Posted March 21, 2005 Posted March 21, 2005 Umm...isn't that triangle a 3-4-5 triangle? -Uncool-
Asimov Pupil Posted April 15, 2005 Posted April 15, 2005 is it a right triangle? i think i solved it using the designs of our good buddy pythagorus with those dimensions would it be 6.25 for the radius? circumfrence of 12.5pi? i'm afraid that only works if it's a right triangle though
Algebracus Posted April 16, 2005 Posted April 16, 2005 As uncool already has pointed out, the triangle is a scaled 3-4-5-triangle, and surely it must be a right triangle. You can easily prove it by using Pytagoras: A triangle with sides a, b and c, c >= a, b, is a right triangle if and only if c^2 = a^2 + b^2. (If and only if, as the Law of Cosine would show, or alternatively the simple observation that when you know three sides of a triangle, the triangle is uniquely given.)
uncool Posted April 16, 2005 Posted April 16, 2005 Now, to find the radius of the circumcircle, you can use this: a/sin A = b/sin B = c/sin C = 2R iirc where a, b, and c are the sides, and A, B, and C are the opposite angles of the corresponding sides, and R is the radius of the circumcircle -Uncool-
Asimov Pupil Posted April 16, 2005 Posted April 16, 2005 but he said without using sine or cosine or heron laws
Algebracus Posted April 28, 2005 Posted April 28, 2005 If you do not want to use sine and cosine, then you can use similarities instead, and if you do not want to use the Heron formula, you can always work hard with Pythagoras formula. I do not know why that would be better - it is easier just learning the stuff, or possibly even better: how to derive it. The point in the specific 7.5-10-12.5- exercise is that right triangles are inscribed in a circle with the hypotenus as a diameter (Thales theorem, a special case of the "periferivinkelsetninga" - I don't know the english name - that the center angle is twice the angle at the circumference. Funny enough, this sentence is not taught at Norwegian schools anymore, although it is very simple and something everyone that know a bit about geometry should know. Last year I was talking to a person who now studies physics and electronics at Princeton, and he had never heard about the theorem, nor did he manage to derive some simple consequences of it. So much for geometry in Norway!)
Chatha Posted May 9, 2005 Posted May 9, 2005 I assume the triangle is equalateral. Find its height and divide it by two.
matt grime Posted May 9, 2005 Posted May 9, 2005 The triangle was established to be a scaled 3-4-5 right angled triangle, and thus the hypotheneuse is a diameter of the circle required.
matt grime Posted May 9, 2005 Posted May 9, 2005 Then you can't possibly get a radius Strange, cos every one else is agreed that the answer is 6.25, half the longest side given.
Chatha Posted May 9, 2005 Posted May 9, 2005 However there appears to be several possible radii. It is impossible to know the diameter as there are several ratio's to the circumference. Remember the triangle is not equalateral.Not sure I understand this one, but the in- radii of the triangle is 15 cm, according to the formular r=ab/a+b-c. Another site says the hypotenus is the diameter, which means the radius is 6.25.This one's a toughie
Daecon Posted May 9, 2005 Posted May 9, 2005 Hmm... what about making a list of all possible radii values, then complaining to the Math teacher that the task was too confusing to work out properly.
Chatha Posted May 9, 2005 Posted May 9, 2005 Give me a break, haven't seen trig since H.School. I was only analizing
Primarygun Posted May 10, 2005 Author Posted May 10, 2005 The solution: Since the triangle is a right-angled triangle, the longest side is the diameter. I think this thread might be closed in a few days.
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