
smchs - cloudfront.net
... A chord which goes through the center of the circle (two radii) Secant: A line which intersects a circle at two points Tangent: A line or segment which intersects a circle at one point only Point of Tangency: The point where a tangent intersects a circle Sphere All points equidistant from s single, ...
... A chord which goes through the center of the circle (two radii) Secant: A line which intersects a circle at two points Tangent: A line or segment which intersects a circle at one point only Point of Tangency: The point where a tangent intersects a circle Sphere All points equidistant from s single, ...
The Orthocenter, Excenters, Excircles, and the Euler Line (from
... The angle bisectors of two exterior angles and the angle bisector of the interior angle opposite their common side are three concurrent rays. The point of concurrence is called the "Excenter of the triangle corresponding to the interior angle bisected". Corollary 4.6.6, The "Excircle" Theorem: There ...
... The angle bisectors of two exterior angles and the angle bisector of the interior angle opposite their common side are three concurrent rays. The point of concurrence is called the "Excenter of the triangle corresponding to the interior angle bisected". Corollary 4.6.6, The "Excircle" Theorem: There ...
Grade 2 geometry and Spatial Sense
... Geometry and Spatial Sense Compose and decompose shapes and figures Student Activities Sort and classify polygons by their geometric properties n Match polygons with the same geometric properties........... 1 n Match polygons with the same geometric properties........... 2 n Close each open shape th ...
... Geometry and Spatial Sense Compose and decompose shapes and figures Student Activities Sort and classify polygons by their geometric properties n Match polygons with the same geometric properties........... 1 n Match polygons with the same geometric properties........... 2 n Close each open shape th ...
Complementary Supplementary Angles.jnt
... GOAL: Be able to recognize complementary and supplementary angles as well as apply their theorems and use them in proof. ...
... GOAL: Be able to recognize complementary and supplementary angles as well as apply their theorems and use them in proof. ...
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 ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑