5: Congruence – Mathematics Notes Form Two
5.0: Congruence
Congruence
I’m sure you have seen some of the figure which in one way
or another one of the shape can become another using turns, flip or slide.
These shapes are said to be Congruent. Study this notes carefully to know
different ways that can help you to recognize congruent figures.
In geometry two figures or objects are congruent if they
have the same shape and size, or if one has the shape and size as the mirror
image of the other.
If one shape can become another using turns (rotation), flip
(reflection), and/ or slide (translation), then the shapes are Congruent. After
any of these transformations the shape must still have the same size,
perimeters, angles, areas and line lengths.
Note that; the two shapes need to be the size to be
Congruent i.e. only rotation, reflection and/ or translation is needed.
Remember this:
- Two
line segments are Congruent if they have the same length.
- Two
angles are Congruent if they have the same measure.
- Two
circles are Congruent if they have the same diameter.
Angles formed by the intersection of two straight lines
When two straight lines intersect, they form four angles.
Each opposite pair are called vertical angles and they are congruent. Vertical
angles are also called opposite angles. See figure below for more
understanding:
Properties of vertical angles
- They
are Congruent: vertical angles are always of equal measure i.e. a = b, and
c = d.
- Sum
of vertical angles (all four angles) is 3600 i.e. a + b +
c + d =3600
- Sum
of Adjacent angles (angles from each pair) is 1800 i.e. a
+ d =1800 ; a + c =1800 ; c + b =1800 ;
b + d =1800.
Congruence of Triangles
Two Triangles are Congruent if their corresponding sides are
equal in length and their corresponding angles are equal in size. The symbol
for congruent shapes is ≅
The Conditions for Congruence of Triangles
Determine the conditions for congruence of triangles
The following are conditions for two Triangles to be
Congruent:
SSS (side-Side-Side): if three pairs of sides of
two Triangles are equal in length, then the Triangles are Congruent. Consider
example below showing two Triangles with equal lengths of the corresponding
sides.
Example 1
Prove that the two Triangles (ΔABC and ΔBCD) below are
Congruent.
Solution
Another condition;
SAS (Side-Angle-Side): This means that we have
two Triangles where we know two sides and the included angles are equal. For
example;
If the two sides and the included angle of one Triangle are
equal to corresponding sides and the included angle of the other Triangle, we
say that the two Triangles are Congruent.
ASA (Angle- Side-Angle): If two angles and the
included side of one Triangle are equal to the two angles and included side of
another Triangle we say that the two Triangles are congruence. For example
AAS condition;
AAS (Angle-Angle-Side): If two angles and non
included side of one triangle are equal to the corresponding angles and non
included side of the other Triangle, then the two triangles are congruent. For
example
HL (hypotenuse-Leg): This is applicable only to a right
angled triangle. The longest side of a right angled triangle is called
hypotenuse and the other two sides are legs.
It means we have two right angled triangles with:
- The
same length of hypotenuse and
- The
same length for one of the other two legs.
If the hypotenuse and one leg of one right angled triangle
are equal to a corresponding hypotenuse and one leg of the other right angled
triangle, the two triangles are congruent. For example
Important note: Do not use AAA (Angle-Angle-Angle). This
means we are given all three angles of a triangle but no sides. This is not
enough information to decide whether the two triangles are congruent or not
because the Triangles can have the same angles but different size. See an
illustration below:
The two triangles are not congruent.
Without knowing at least one side, we can’t be sure that the
triangles are congruent.
Congruence of Triangle
Prove congruence of triangle
Example 2
Prove that the two Triangles (ΔABC and ΔBCD) below are
Congruent.
Solution;
Theorems on Congruence of Triangles to Solve Related
Problems
Apply theorems on congruence of triangles to solve related
problems
Isosceles Triangle Theorem
The figure below illustrates an example of an isosceles
triangle:
An isosceles triangle has two congruent sides (opposite
sides) and two congruent angles. The congruent angles are called base angles
and the other angle is called vertex angle. The angles A and B are base angles
and angle C is the vertex angle.
The base angle Theorem
If two sides of a triangle are congruent, then the angles
opposite to these sides are congruent
Required to prove: angle A = angle B
Therefore, the base angles i.e. angle CAS and angle BCS are
equal (by the definition of a congruence of triangles).
It states that, if two angles of a triangle are congruent,
then sides opposite those angles are congruent.
Exercise 1
1. In the isosceles triangle ABC, BA and BC are congruent. D
and E are points on AC such that AD is congruent to BD and BE is congruent to
BC. Show that the triangles ABD and CBE are congruent
2. ABCD is a parallelogram and BEFC is a square. Show that triangles
ABE and DCF are congruent.
3. Use the figure below to answer the following questions: