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Question
line segment cd in the following diagram is the perpendicular bisector of line segment ab.
diagram: points a, m, b (collinear), points c, m, d (collinear), right angle at m, with ( overline{ab} perp overline{cd} )
is line segment ab the perpendicular bisector of the line segment cd? explain your reasoning.
To be a perpendicular bisector, a line segment must be perpendicular to another segment and bisect it (divide it into two equal parts). We know \( \overline{AB} \perp \overline{CD} \) (they are perpendicular), but we need to check if \( AB \) bisects \( CD \). From the diagram, \( M \) is the midpoint of \( AB \) (since \( CD \) is the perpendicular bisector of \( AB \)), but there's no information showing \( M \) is the midpoint of \( CD \) (i.e., \( CM = MD \) is not confirmed). So, \( AB \) is perpendicular to \( CD \) but we don't know if it bisects \( CD \). Thus, \( AB \) is not necessarily the perpendicular bisector of \( CD \) because a perpendicular bisector requires both perpendicularity and bisecting (dividing the segment into two equal parts), and we only know \( AB \) is perpendicular to \( CD \), not that it bisects \( CD \) (we don't have evidence \( M \) is the midpoint of \( CD \)).
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Line segment \( AB \) is not necessarily the perpendicular bisector of line segment \( CD \). A perpendicular bisector of a segment must be perpendicular to the segment and bisect it (divide it into two congruent parts). We know \( \overline{AB} \perp \overline{CD} \) (they are perpendicular), but the diagram and given information only confirm that \( CD \) bisects \( AB \) (since \( CD \) is the perpendicular bisector of \( AB \), so \( M \) is the midpoint of \( AB \)). There is no information showing that \( AB \) bisects \( CD \) (i.e., that \( M \) is the midpoint of \( CD \), or that \( CM = MD \)). For \( AB \) to be the perpendicular bisector of \( CD \), it would need to both be perpendicular to \( CD \) and split \( CD \) into two equal - length segments, and we only have confirmation of the perpendicularity, not the bisecting (midpoint) condition for \( CD \).