- (a)
- Beginning with the diagram on the left, Natalia draws and marks the
diagram to show segments that she knows to be congruent because each
one is a of the circle.
- (b)
- Natalia sees that and are triangles, so she marks the figure to show angles that must be congruent.
- (c)
- In order to do some algebra with these congruent angles, Natalia labels their measures and , as shown in the picture on the right.
- (d)
- She writes an equation for the sum of the angles of :
- (e)
- She divides that equation by to conclude that degrees.
Two proofs.
In the figure below, is a diameter of a circle with center . Prove that .
Because is the measure of an angle exterior to , it is equal to the sum of the measures of the oppositeadjacentremote interioralternate interior angles. In other words .
Alternatively, without using the exterior angle theorem, one might proceed as follows:
- (a)
- because of the angle sum in .
- (b)
- because they form a linear pair.
- (c)
- Then by comparing the two equations.
Note: This handles the special case in which the center of the circle lies on one side of the inscribed angle. For the general result, consider two cases: (1) When the center of the circle is in the interior of the inscribed angle; and (2) When the center of the circle is not in the interior of the inscribed angle.