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AAA, ASS, SSA TheoremsDate: 11/16/2001 at 20:32:34 From: Zakiyah Subject: SSA, AAA or ASS postulates Can you please tell me in detail why the ASS, SSA, and AAA postulates can't be used to determine triangle congruence? Thanks. Date: 11/17/2001 at 08:45:33 From: Doctor Jubal Subject: Re: SSA, AAA or ASS postulates Hi Zakiyah, Thanks for writing to Dr. Math. Just a side note: the SSS, SAS, and ASA triangle congruency theorems are theorems, not postulates. A postulate is something you just state and assume to be true. A theorem is something you can prove, based on your postulates. Let's start with the angle-angle-angle or AAA Congruency Theorem. Think of two equilateral triangles, one with side length 1 and one with side length 2. They have the same angles as each other (each angle is 60 degrees), but they're not congruent, because they have different side lengths. Actually, there is an AAA theorem, the AAA Similarity Theorem, but it's not a congruency theorem. We say that two triangles are similar if all their angles are the same. This means that they are exactly the same shape, but are different sizes. Similarity comes in quite handy when trying to prove two objects have certain proportions (like proving that one is exactly twice the size of the other). As for angle-side-side (ASS) and side-side-angle (SSA), they are the same theorem. The two triangles have two congruent sides, and one congruent angle that is not the angle between the two congruent sides. To demonstrate why this isn't a congruency theorem, I'm going to ask you to draw some figures. First, draw a line segment and label its ends points A and B. This is one of the known sides, the "middle" S in ASS or SSA. At one end of it, we know the length of the next side, but we don't know what angle it comes off at. So draw a circle centered at point A - the radius of the circle is the length of the the other line segment, and the third vertex of the triangle must lie on this circle. There are two possibilities: either the radius of the circle is longer than segment AB, or it is shorter. Draw one figure for each case.
Date: 11/17/2001 at 19:10:04
From: Zakiyah
Subject: Re: SSA, AAA or ASS postulates
This is exactly what I wanted to know. Thank you so much; I now
understand.
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