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7.1 Polygons and Exploring Interior Angles of Polygons Warm Up
7.1 Polygons and Exploring Interior Angles of Polygons Warm Up

... Objective: Identify, name, and describe polygons. A polygon is a plane figure that is formed by two or more segments such that each side intersects exactly two other sides, one at each endpoint. Each segment of a polygon is called a side. Any point where two sides meet is called a vertex. (The plura ...
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... five Common Notions and first four Postulates of Euclid. In other words, there is a geometry in which neither the Fifth Postulate nor any of its alternatives is taken as an axiom. This geometry is called Absolute Geometry, and an account of it can be found in several textbooks in Coxeter’s book “Int ...
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... Theorem 1.7.8: If two angles are congruent, then their bisectors separate these angles into four congruent angles. Theorem 2.1.1: From a point not on a given line, there is exactly one line perpendicular to the given line. Postulate 10: (Parallel Postulate) Through a point not on a line, exacly one ...
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Steinitz's theorem



In polyhedral combinatorics, a branch of mathematics, Steinitz's theorem is a characterization of the undirected graphs formed by the edges and vertices of three-dimensional convex polyhedra: they are exactly the (simple) 3-vertex-connected planar graphs (with at least four vertices). That is, every convex polyhedron forms a 3-connected planar graph, and every 3-connected planar graph can be represented as the graph of a convex polyhedron. For this reason, the 3-connected planar graphs are also known as polyhedral graphs. Steinitz's theorem is named after Ernst Steinitz, who submitted its first proof for publication in 1916. Branko Grünbaum has called this theorem “the most important and deepest known result on 3-polytopes.”The name ""Steinitz's theorem"" has also been applied to other results of Steinitz: the Steinitz exchange lemma implying that each basis of a vector space has the same number of vectors, the theorem that if the convex hull of a point set contains a unit sphere, then the convex hull of a finite subset of the point contains a smaller concentric sphere, and Steinitz's vectorial generalization of the Riemann series theorem on the rearrangements of conditionally convergent series.↑ ↑ 2.0 2.1 ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑
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