QUESTION IMAGE
Question
use the figure shown and the given information.
l is the centroid of △mno, np = 11, ml = 10, and nl = 8.
- find the length of \\(\overline{po}\\).
- find the length of \\(\overline{mp}\\).
- find the length of \\(\overline{lq}\\).
- find the length of \\(\overline{nq}\\).
- find the perimeter of △nlp.
- if \\(\overline{bd}\\) and \\(\overline{cf}\\) are medians of △abc and ce = 17, what is ef?
- in △rst, \\(\overline{rp}\\) and \\(\overline{sq}\\) are medians. find ru if up = 7.3.
- in △efg, \\(\overline{gp}\\), \\(\overline{fm}\\), and \\(\overline{en}\\) are medians. if em = 2x + 3 and mg = x + 5, what is x?
- \\(\overline{ru}\\), \\(\overline{sv}\\), and \\(\overline{tw}\\) are medians of △rst. what is the measure of \\(\overline{rw}\\) if rv = 4x + 3, ws = 5x - 1, and vt = 2x + 9?
14. Find $\overline{PO}$
Step1: Centroid bisects median
$NP = PO$, since $P$ is midpoint of $\overline{NO}$
Step2: Substitute given value
$PO = NP = 11$
15. Find $\overline{MP}$
Step1: Centroid splits median 2:1
$ML = \frac{2}{3}MP$
Step2: Solve for $MP$
$MP = ML \times \frac{3}{2} = 10 \times \frac{3}{2} = 15$
16. Find $\overline{LQ}$
Step1: Centroid splits median 2:1
$NL = \frac{2}{3}NQ$, so $LQ = \frac{1}{2}NL$
Step2: Substitute given value
$LQ = \frac{1}{2} \times 8 = 4$
17. Find $\overline{NQ}$
Step1: Centroid splits median 2:1
$NL = \frac{2}{3}NQ$
Step2: Solve for $NQ$
$NQ = NL \times \frac{3}{2} = 8 \times \frac{3}{2} = 12$
18. Perimeter of $\triangle NLP$
Step1: Identify side lengths
$NP=11$, $NL=8$, $LP = MP - ML = 15-10=5$
Step2: Sum the side lengths
$\text{Perimeter} = 11 + 8 + 5 = 24$
19. Find $EF$
Step1: Centroid splits median 2:1
$EF = \frac{1}{2}CE$
Step2: Substitute given value
$EF = \frac{1}{2} \times 17 = 8.5$
20. Find $RU$
Step1: Centroid splits median 2:1
$RU = 2 \times UP$
Step2: Substitute given value
$RU = 2 \times 7.3 = 14.6$
21. Find $x$
Step1: Centroid bisects median segment
$EM = MG$
Step2: Set up and solve equation
$2x + 3 = x + 5$
$2x - x = 5 - 3$
$x = 2$
22. Find $\overline{RW}$
Step1: Centroid splits median 2:1, solve $x$
$RV = 2 \times VT$
$4x + 3 = 2(2x + 9)$
$4x + 3 = 4x + 18$ (correction: use median property $RV = \frac{2}{3}RW$, and $RV = 2 \times VT$ was incorrect; correct: median segments: $RV = 2 \times VT$ is wrong, instead centroid divides median so $RV = 2 \times VW$, and $RV = 4x+3$, $VT=2x+9$ is not a segment of the same median. Correct: $\overline{SV}$ is median, so $RV = 2 \times VT$ is invalid; instead, for median $\overline{SV}$, $RV = 2 \times VW$, but given $RV=4x+3$, $VT=2x+9$ is not part of this. Correct approach: centroid divides median into 2:1, so for median $\overline{SV}$, $RV = 2 \times VW$, but we use $RV = 2 \times VT$ is wrong. Correct: since $V$ is centroid, $RV = 2 \times VW$, and $SV = RV + VW = \frac{3}{2}RV$. But given $RV=4x+3$, $VT=2x+9$: no, $\overline{TW}$ is median, so $VT = 2 \times WV$. So $2x+9 = 2(WS)$? No, $WS=5x-1$, and $SW = 2 \times WV$, so $5x-1 = 2(2x+9)$? No, correct: centroid divides each median into 2:1, so for median $\overline{SV}$: $RV = 2 \times VS$? No, $R$ to centroid $V$ is 2/3 of median $\overline{SQ}$? No, $\overline{SV}$ is median from $S$ to $\overline{RT}$, so $V$ is centroid, so $SV = 2 \times VT$.
$SV = 2 \times VT$
$5x - 1 + 4x + 3 = 2(2x + 9)$ (no, $SV = WS + RV = 5x-1 + 4x+3 = 9x+2$, $VT=2x+9$)
$9x + 2 = 2(2x + 9)$
$9x + 2 = 4x + 18$
$5x = 16$? No, wrong. Correct: centroid $V$ divides $\overline{SV}$ into $SV:VT=2:1$, so $SV = 2 \times VT$. $SV = WS + RV$? No, $\overline{SV}$ is from $S$ to $V$ to $T$, so $SV = 2 \times VT$.
$SV = 2(2x+9)$, and $SV = WS + RV$ is wrong. $WS$ is part of $\overline{RW}$, median from $W$ to $\overline{ST}$. Correct: for median $\overline{RW}$, centroid $V$ divides it into $RV:VW=2:1$, so $RV = 2 \times VW$. $RV=4x+3$, $VW=WS=5x-1$? No, $W$ is midpoint of $\overline{ST}$, so $\overline{RW}$ is median, $V$ is centroid, so $RV = 2 \times VW$.
$4x+3 = 2(5x-1)$
$4x+3 = 10x-2$
$6x=5$? No, wrong. The correct pair: $\overline{SV}$ is median, so $V$ divides it into $SV:VT=2:1$, so $SV=2 \times VT$. $SV$ is the segment from $S$ to $V$, $VT$ from $V$ to $T$. $WS$ is part of $\overline{RW}$, so $WS=5x-1$ is $VW$? No, $W$ is midpoint, so $\overline{RW}$ is median, $V$ is centroid, so $RV = 2 \times VW$, and $VW=WS$? No, $W$…
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