QUESTION IMAGE
Question
identify all the obtuse isosceles triangles. obtuse isosceles not obtuse isosceles
To solve this, we first recall the definitions:
- An isosceles triangle has at least two equal - length sides (marked by tick marks).
- An obtuse triangle has one angle greater than \(90^\circ\) (visually, it “opens wide” with one angle clearly larger than a right angle).
Step 1: Identify Isosceles Triangles
Look for triangles with tick marks (indicating equal sides):
- Triangle 1 (leftmost): Has two equal sides (tick marks) and one angle > \(90^\circ\) (obtuse).
- Triangle 2: Equilateral (all sides equal, so isosceles) but all angles \(60^\circ\) (acute, not obtuse).
- Triangle 3: Two equal sides (tick marks), angles all acute (not obtuse).
- Triangle 4: Scalene (no equal sides, so not isosceles).
- Triangle 5: Two equal sides (tick marks), angles all acute (not obtuse).
- Triangle 6: Two equal sides (tick marks) and one angle > \(90^\circ\) (obtuse).
Step 2: Classify Obtuse Isosceles
From the isosceles triangles, select those with an obtuse angle. Only the left - most triangle (Triangle 1) and the right - most triangle (Triangle 6) meet both criteria (isosceles + obtuse).
Snap & solve any problem in the app
Get step-by-step solutions on Sovi AI
Photo-based solutions with guided steps
Explore more problems and detailed explanations
The obtuse isosceles triangles are the first (left - most) and the sixth (right - most) triangles in the given set (the ones with two equal sides and one obtuse angle).