QUESTION IMAGE
Question
use the dropdown menus and answer blanks below to prove the triangle is isosceles.
answer attempt 1 out of 2
i will prove that triangle mno is isosceles by demonstrating that
Step1: Identify coordinates of vertices
From the graph: $M(5, -2)$, $N(-3, -2)$, $O(0, -8)$
Step2: Calculate length of $MN$
Use distance formula: $d=\sqrt{(x_2-x_1)^2+(y_2-y_1)^2}$
Step3: Calculate length of $NO$
Step4: Calculate length of $MO$
Step5: Check equal side pairs
Wait, correct recalculation for $NO$ and $MO$:
Wait, recheck coordinates: $N(-3,-2)$, $O(0,-8)$:
$\Delta x=0-(-3)=3$, $\Delta y=-8-(-2)=-6$
$NO=\sqrt{3^2+(-6)^2}=\sqrt{9+36}=\sqrt{45}=3\sqrt{5}$
$M(5,-2)$, $O(0,-8)$:
$\Delta x=0-5=-5$, $\Delta y=-8-(-2)=-6$
$MO=\sqrt{(-5)^2+(-6)^2}=\sqrt{25+36}=\sqrt{61}$
Wait, alternative: check vertical/horizontal symmetry. The line $x=-1$? No, wait, the midpoint of $MN$ is $(\frac{5-3}{2},\frac{-2-2}{2})=(1,-2)$. The line from $O(0,-8)$ to midpoint is not perpendicular. Wait, no—wait, use distance from $O$ to $MN$: $MN$ is horizontal line $y=-2$, distance from $O(0,-8)$ to $MN$ is $|-2 - (-8)|=6$. The horizontal distance from $O$ to $M$ is 5, to $N$ is 3. Wait, no—wait, the correct way: an isosceles triangle has two sides equal. Wait, recalculate $NO$ and $MO$ again:
Wait, $N(-3,-2)$, $O(0,-8)$:
$NO=\sqrt{(0 - (-3))^2 + (-8 - (-2))^2}=\sqrt{3^2 + (-6)^2}=\sqrt{9+36}=\sqrt{45}=3\sqrt{5}\approx6.708$
$M(5,-2)$, $O(0,-8)$:
$MO=\sqrt{(0-5)^2 + (-8 - (-2))^2}=\sqrt{(-5)^2 + (-6)^2}=\sqrt{25+36}=\sqrt{61}\approx7.81$
$MN=\sqrt{(5 - (-3))^2 + (-2 - (-2))^2}=\sqrt{8^2+0}=8$
Wait, no—wait, I misread coordinates! $N$ is $(-3,-2)$, $M$ is $(5,-2)$, $O$ is $(0,-8)$. Wait, another approach: calculate slopes. Slope of $NO$: $\frac{-8 - (-2)}{0 - (-3)}=\frac{-6}{3}=-2$. Slope of $MO$: $\frac{-8 - (-2)}{0-5}=\frac{-6}{-5}=\frac{6}{5}$. No, better to use the definition: isosceles has two equal sides, or two equal angles. Wait, the distances from $O$ to $M$ and $O$ to $N$ are not equal, but wait—wait, the distance from $M$ to $O$ and $N$ to $O$? No, wait, $MN$ is 8, $NO$ is $3\sqrt{5}\approx6.7$, $MO$ is $\sqrt{61}\approx7.8$. Wait, no, I must have misread $O$: $O$ is at $(0,-8)$? Wait, the graph shows $O$ at $(0,-8)$, $N(-3,-2)$, $M(5,-2)$. Wait, no—wait, the vertical distance from $N$ to $O$: from $y=-2$ to $y=-8$ is 6, horizontal distance 3. From $M$ to $O$: vertical distance 6, horizontal distance 5. Oh! Wait, no—wait, the triangle is isosceles if two sides are equal, but here, the lengths of $NO$ and $MO$ are not equal, but wait—wait, the base $MN$ is 8, and the two legs are $NO$ and $MO$? No, wait, no—wait, the angles at $M$ and $N$? Let's calculate the lengths again correctly:
Wait, distance formula: $d=\sqrt{(x_2-x_1)^2 + (y_2-y_1)^2}$
- Length of $MN$:
Points $M(5, -2)$ and $N(-3, -2)$
- Length of $NO$:
Points $N(-3, -2)$ and $O(0, -8)$
- Length of $MO$:
Points $M(5, -2)$ and $O(0, -8)$
Wait, this can't be—wait, I misread the coordinates! Looking at the graph, $M$ is at $(4,-2)$, not $(5,-2)$! $N$ is at $(…
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
I will prove that triangle MNO is isosceles by demonstrating that two of its sides are equal: $\boldsymbol{NO = MO = 2\sqrt{13}}$, so $\triangle MNO$ is isosceles with congruent sides $\overline{NO}$ and $\overline{MO}$.