QUESTION IMAGE
Question
c is the centroid of isosceles triangle abd with vertex angle ∠abd. does the following proof correctly justify that triangles abe and dbe are congruent?
- it is given that triangle abd is isosceles, so segment ab is congruent to db by the definition of isosceles triangle.
- triangles abe and dbe share side be, so it is congruent to itself by the reflexive property.
- it is given that c is the centroid of triangle abd, so segment be is a perpendicular bisector.
- e is a midpoint, creating congruent segments ae and de, by the definition of midpoint.
- triangles abe and dbe are congruent by the sss postulate.
image of triangle abd with centroid c and midpoint e on ad, be connecting b to e
options:
- there is an error in line 1; segments ab and bc are congruent.
- there is an error in line 2; segment be is not a shared side.
- there is an error in line 3; segment be should be a median
- the proof is correct.
Brief Explanations
- Line 1 is correct: By definition, isosceles triangle ABD with vertex ∠ABD has $\overline{AB} \cong \overline{DB}$.
- Line 2 is correct: $\overline{BE}$ is a common side to both triangles, so it is congruent to itself via the reflexive property.
- Line 3 is incorrect: A centroid is the intersection of a triangle's medians. While in an isosceles triangle, the median from the vertex angle is also a perpendicular bisector, the direct property of the centroid only confirms BE is a median (not a perpendicular bisector) initially. The proof incorrectly overstates the property here.
- While E being a midpoint (from BE being a median) is valid, the error in line 3 makes the proof's reasoning flawed at that step.
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There is an error in line 3; segment BE should be a median