QUESTION IMAGE
Question
the graphs below shows some properties of regular polygons. when compared with the independent variable, how many of the graphs represent a linear relationship? 0 1 2 3
Step1: Recall linear relationship
A linear relationship has a constant rate of change (slope), meaning the graph is a straight line (either increasing, decreasing, or horizontal with constant slope).
Step2: Analyze the first graph (diagonals from a vertex)
For a regular polygon with \( n \) sides, the number of diagonals from a vertex is \( n - 3 \). Let's check the points:
- For \( n = 3 \) (triangle), diagonals from a vertex: \( 3 - 3 = 0 \) (matches the graph: (3, 0)).
- For \( n = 4 \) (quadrilateral), diagonals from a vertex: \( 4 - 3 = 1 \) (matches (4, 1)).
- For \( n = 5 \) (pentagon), diagonals from a vertex: \( 5 - 3 = 2 \) (matches (5, 2)).
- For \( n = 6 \) (hexagon), diagonals from a vertex: \( 6 - 3 = 3 \) (matches (6, 3)).
The equation here is \( y = n - 3 \), which is a linear equation (slope \( m = 1 \), y-intercept \( -3 \)). So this graph is linear.
Step3: Analyze the second graph (not fully visible, but let's assume the other common properties)
Another property: sum of interior angles of a regular polygon is \( (n - 2)\times180^\circ \), or exterior angle is \( 360^\circ/n \) (constant for regular polygons, so horizontal line, which is linear with slope 0). Wait, but the second graph's y-axis is "720" (maybe sum of interior angles? Wait, no, maybe exterior angles? Wait, the first graph is diagonals from a vertex, which we saw is linear. Let's check the options. Wait, the question is "how many of the graphs represent a linear relationship". Wait, maybe there are two graphs? Wait, the first graph (diagonals from vertex) is linear (\( y = n - 3 \)). Let's check another property: number of vertices vs number of sides: \( V = n \), which is linear (slope 1). Wait, maybe the second graph: if it's number of vertices (y-axis) vs number of sides (x-axis), then \( y = x \), which is linear. Wait, but the first graph we analyzed (diagonals from vertex) is linear. Wait, maybe the options: the choices are 0,1,2,3. Wait, let's re-examine.
Wait, the first graph: points (3,0), (4,1), (5,2), (6,3). The slope between (3,0) and (4,1) is \( \frac{1 - 0}{4 - 3} = 1 \). Between (4,1) and (5,2): \( \frac{2 - 1}{5 - 4} = 1 \). Between (5,2) and (6,3): \( \frac{3 - 2}{6 - 5} = 1 \). So constant slope, linear.
Now, another property: number of sides vs number of vertices: \( V = n \), so if a graph is vertices vs sides, it's \( y = x \), linear. Or sum of exterior angles: always \( 360^\circ \), so horizontal line (slope 0), linear. Wait, but the question is "how many of the graphs" (assuming two graphs? Wait, the image shows two graphs: one with diagonals from vertex, another with maybe sum of interior angles or something else. Wait, maybe the second graph: if it's sum of interior angles, \( S = (n - 2)\times180 = 180n - 360 \), which is linear (slope 180). Wait, but maybe the options: the answer is 2? Wait, no, wait the first graph (diagonals from vertex) is linear. Let's check the options. Wait, the choices are 0,1,2,3. Wait, maybe I misread. Wait, the first graph: diagonals from a vertex: \( d = n - 3 \), linear. Another graph: number of sides vs number of vertices: \( V = n \), linear. So two graphs? Wait, but maybe the second graph is not linear. Wait, no, let's think again.
Wait, the first graph: points (3,0), (4,1), (5,2), (6,3). Linear, slope 1.
Another property: number of diagonals (total) in a regular polygon: \( D = \frac{n(n - 3)}{2} \), which is quadratic (not linear). But the first graph is diagonals from a vertex, which is linear.
Now, the second graph: maybe it's the measure of each interior angle? For a re…
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