212k views
0 votes
Find the value
X
of X and Y.

Find the value X of X and Y.-example-1

2 Answers

0 votes

Answer:

X=60° Y=30°

Explanation:

I recreated your figure in the correct scale and then just measured with a protractor.

X:

If all the lines with the little line on them are equal to each other, then the triangle with the x in it is an equilateral triangle. This means that each angle in that one are 60° because according to the triangle angle sum theorem, all three interior angles of a triangle must add up to 180°. So if you divide that by 3 because this is an equilateral triangle, you get 60°.

Y:

Because the angle to the right of X is also 60°, and the two lines that connect across X and Y create a 180° flat line, they are supplementary and we can subtract 60 from 180 to get the angle to the left of Y. 180-60=120

If we use the Triangle Angle Sum theorem again, we find out that the remaining two angles in the triangle on the right add up to 60. 180-120=60.

Since two of those lines are equal, the last two angles have to be equal. So 60/2=30. Therefore, ∠Y=30°

User Panky Sharma
by
8.7k points
4 votes

Answer:

x = 60°

y = 120°

Explanation:

the triangle on the left is equilateral, 3 congruent sides and 3 congruent angles, (see signs on the sides) therefore the angle is 60° (the sum of the internal angles in the triangles is 180°, 180 : 3 = 60)

the triangle on the right is isosceles, two congruent sides and two congruent angles, we consider the line that goes from x to y, it is 180°, we remove the 60° of the equilateral triangle from 180° and we have 120°

x = 60°

y = 120°

User Teodor Tite
by
8.8k points

No related questions found

Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.

9.4m questions

12.2m answers

Categories