Sovi.AI - AI Math Tutor

Scan to solve math questions

QUESTION IMAGE

identify all the obtuse isosceles triangles. obtuse isosceles\tnot obtu…

Question

identify all the obtuse isosceles triangles.
obtuse isosceles\tnot obtuse isosceles

Explanation:

Response

To solve this, we first recall the definitions:

  • An isosceles triangle has at least two equal sides (marked by tick marks) or two equal angles.
  • An obtuse triangle has one angle greater than \( 90^\circ \) (visually, one "wide" angle).
Step 1: Analyze each triangle
  1. First triangle (leftmost): Two equal sides (tick marks), and one obtuse angle (visually wide).
  2. Second triangle: Two equal sides, but all angles look acute (less than \( 90^\circ \)) → acute isosceles.
  3. Third triangle: Right angle (marked with a square) → right isosceles, not obtuse.
  4. Fourth triangle: Two equal sides, one obtuse angle → obtuse isosceles.
  5. Fifth triangle: Two equal sides, all angles acute → acute isosceles.
  6. Sixth triangle: Two equal sides, one obtuse angle → obtuse isosceles.
Step 2: Categorize
  • Obtuse Isosceles: Triangles with two equal sides and one obtuse angle (first, fourth, sixth).
  • Not Obtuse Isosceles: Triangles with two equal sides but acute angles (second, fifth) or right angle (third).

Obtuse Isosceles (drag these here):

  • First triangle (two equal sides, obtuse angle)
  • Fourth triangle (two equal sides, obtuse angle)
  • Sixth triangle (two equal sides, obtuse angle)

Not Obtuse Isosceles (drag these here):

  • Second triangle (acute isosceles)
  • Third triangle (right isosceles)
  • Fifth triangle (acute isosceles)

Answer:

To solve this, we first recall the definitions:

  • An isosceles triangle has at least two equal sides (marked by tick marks) or two equal angles.
  • An obtuse triangle has one angle greater than \( 90^\circ \) (visually, one "wide" angle).
Step 1: Analyze each triangle
  1. First triangle (leftmost): Two equal sides (tick marks), and one obtuse angle (visually wide).
  2. Second triangle: Two equal sides, but all angles look acute (less than \( 90^\circ \)) → acute isosceles.
  3. Third triangle: Right angle (marked with a square) → right isosceles, not obtuse.
  4. Fourth triangle: Two equal sides, one obtuse angle → obtuse isosceles.
  5. Fifth triangle: Two equal sides, all angles acute → acute isosceles.
  6. Sixth triangle: Two equal sides, one obtuse angle → obtuse isosceles.
Step 2: Categorize
  • Obtuse Isosceles: Triangles with two equal sides and one obtuse angle (first, fourth, sixth).
  • Not Obtuse Isosceles: Triangles with two equal sides but acute angles (second, fifth) or right angle (third).

Obtuse Isosceles (drag these here):

  • First triangle (two equal sides, obtuse angle)
  • Fourth triangle (two equal sides, obtuse angle)
  • Sixth triangle (two equal sides, obtuse angle)

Not Obtuse Isosceles (drag these here):

  • Second triangle (acute isosceles)
  • Third triangle (right isosceles)
  • Fifth triangle (acute isosceles)