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Similarity Postulates

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    Let's say we have triangle ABC.
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    It looks something like this.
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    I want to think about the
    minimum amount of information.
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    I want to come up with
    a couple of postulates
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    that we can use to determine
    whether another triangle is
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    similar to triangle ABC.
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    So we already know
    that if all three
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    of the corresponding
    angles are congruent
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    to the corresponding
    angles on ABC, then
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    we know that we're dealing
    with congruent triangles.
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    So for example, if
    this is 30 degrees,
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    this angle is 90 degrees, and
    this angle right over here
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    is 60 degrees.
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    And we have another
    triangle that
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    looks like this, it's
    clearly a smaller triangle,
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    but it's corresponding angles.
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    So this is 30 degrees.
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    This is 90 degrees,
    and this is 60 degrees,
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    we know that XYZ in this case,
    is going to be similar to ABC.
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    So we would know from this
    because corresponding angles
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    are congruent, we would
    know that triangle ABC
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    is similar to triangle XYZ.
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    And you've got to get the
    order right to make sure
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    that you have the right
    corresponding angles.
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    Y corresponds to
    the 90-degree angle.
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    X corresponds to
    the 30-degree angle.
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    A corresponds to
    the 30-degree angle.
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    So A and X are the
    first two things.
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    B and Y, which are the 90
    degrees, are the second two,
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    and then Z is the last one.
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    So that's what we know already,
    if you have three angles.
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    But do you need three angles?
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    If we only knew two of the
    angles, would that be enough?
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    Well, sure because if you know
    two angles for a triangle,
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    you know the third.
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    So for example, if I
    have another triangle
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    that looks like this--
    let me draw it like this--
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    and if I told you that only
    two of the corresponding angles
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    are congruent.
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    So maybe this angle right here
    is congruent to this angle,
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    and that angle right there
    is congruent to that angle.
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    Is that enough to say that
    these two triangles are similar?
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    Well, sure.
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    Because in a triangle, if
    you know two of the angles,
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    then you know what the
    last angle has to be.
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    If you know that this is 30
    and you know that that is 90,
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    then you know that this
    angle has to be 60 degrees.
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    Whatever these two angles
    are, subtract them from 180,
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    and that's going
    to be this angle.
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    So in general, in order
    to show similarity,
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    you don't have to show three
    corresponding angles are
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    congruent, you really
    just have to show two.
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    So this will be the first of
    our similarity postulates.
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    We call it angle-angle.
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    If you could show that two
    corresponding angles are
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    congruent, then we're dealing
    with similar triangles.
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    So for example, just to
    put some numbers here,
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    if this was 30 degrees, and
    we know that on this triangle,
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    this is 90 degrees
    right over here,
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    we know that this
    triangle right over here
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    is similar to that one there.
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    And you can really just
    go to the third angle
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    in this pretty
    straightforward way.
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    You say this third
    angle is 60 degrees,
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    so all three angles
    are the same.
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    That's one of our
    constraints for similarity.
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    Now, the other thing we
    know about similarity
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    is that the ratio
    between all of the sides
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    are going to be the same.
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    So for example, if we have
    another triangle right
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    over here-- let me
    draw another triangle--
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    I'll call this
    triangle X, Y, and Z.
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    And let's say that we know that
    the ratio between AB and XY,
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    we know that AB over XY-- so
    the ratio between this side
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    and this side-- notice we're not
    saying that they're congruent.
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    We're looking at
    their ratio now.
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    We're saying AB
    over XY, let's say
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    that that is equal
    to BC over YZ.
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    That is equal to BC over YZ.
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    And that is equal to AC over XZ.
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    So once again, this
    is one of the ways
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    that we say, hey,
    this means similarity.
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    So if you have all three
    corresponding sides,
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    the ratio between all
    three corresponding sides
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    are the same, then
    we know we are
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    dealing with similar triangles.
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    So this is what we call
    side-side-side similarity.
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    And you don't want
    to get these confused
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    with side-side-side congruence.
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    So these are all of our
    similarity postulates
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    or axioms or things that
    we're going to assume
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    and then we're
    going to build off
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    of them to solve problems
    and prove other things.
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    Side-side-side, when we're
    talking about congruence,
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    means that the corresponding
    sides are congruent.
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    Side-side-side for
    similarity, we're
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    saying that the ratio
    between corresponding sides
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    are going to be the same.
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    So for example, let's say
    this right over here is 10.
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    No.
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    Let me think of a bigger number.
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    Let's say this is 60, this
    right over here is 30,
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    and this right over here
    is 30 square roots of 3,
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    and I just made those
    numbers because we will soon
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    learn what typical ratios
    are of the sides of 30-60-90
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    triangles.
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    And let's say this
    one over here is
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    6, 3, and 3 square roots of 3.
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    Notice AB over XY
    30 square roots
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    of 3 over 3 square roots
    of 3, this will be 10.
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    What is BC over XY?
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    30 divided by 3 is 10.
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    And what is 60 divided
    by 6 or AC over XZ?
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    Well, that's going to be 10.
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    So in general, to go from
    the corresponding side
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    here to the
    corresponding side there,
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    we always multiply
    by 10 on every side.
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    So we're not saying
    they're congruent
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    or we're not saying
    the sides are
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    the same for this
    side-side-side for similarity.
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    We're saying that we're
    really just scaling them up
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    by the same amount,
    or another way
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    to think about it, the ratio
    between corresponding sides
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    are the same.
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    Now, what about
    if we had-- let's
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    start another triangle
    right over here.
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    Let me draw it like this.
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    Actually, I want to leave this
    here so we can have our list.
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    So let's draw
    another triangle ABC.
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    So this is A, B,
    and C. And let's say
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    that we know that this side,
    when we go to another triangle,
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    we know that XY is AB
    multiplied by some constant.
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    So I can write it over here.
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    XY is equal to some
    constant times AB.
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    Actually, let me make XY
    bigger, so actually, it
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    doesn't have to be.
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    That constant could be
    less than 1 in which case
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    it would be a smaller value.
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    But let me just do it that way.
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    So let me just make XY
    look a little bit bigger.
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    So let's say that this
    is X and that is Y.
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    So let's say that we
    know that XY over AB
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    is equal to some constant.
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    Or if you multiply
    both sides by AB,
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    you would get XY is some
    scaled up version of AB.
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    So maybe AB is 5, XY is 10,
    then our constant would be 2.
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    We scaled it up
    by a factor of 2.
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    And let's say we also
    know that angle ABC is
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    congruent to angle XYZ.
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    I'll add another
    point over here.
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    So let me draw another
    side right over here.
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    So this is Z. So
    let's say we also
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    know that angle ABC
    is congruent to XYZ,
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    and let's say we know that
    the ratio between BC and YZ
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    is also this constant.
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    The ratio between
    BC and YZ is also
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    equal to the same constant.
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    So an example where this 5
    and 10, maybe this is 3 and 6.
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    The constant we're
    kind of doubling
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    the length of the side.
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    So is this triangle XYZ
    going to be similar?
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    Well, if you think about it, if
    XY is the same multiple of AB
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    as YZ is a multiple of BC,
    and the angle in between
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    is congruent, there's
    only one triangle
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    we can set up over here.
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    We're only constrained to
    one triangle right over here,
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    and so we're
    completely constraining
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    the length of this side,
    and the length of this side
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    is going to have to be that
    same scale as that over there.
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    And so we call that
    side-angle-side similarity.
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    So once again, we
    saw SSS and SAS
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    in our congruence
    postulates, but we're
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    saying something
    very different here.
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    We're saying that
    in SAS, if the ratio
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    between corresponding
    sides of the true triangle
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    are the same, so AB and XY of
    one corresponding side and then
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    another corresponding side,
    so that's that second side,
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    so that's between BC and YZ,
    and the angle between them
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    are congruent, then we're
    saying it's similar.
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    For SAS for congruency, we
    said that the sides actually
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    had to be congruent.
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    Here we're saying that the ratio
    between the corresponding sides
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    just has to be the same.
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    So for example SAS, just to
    apply it, if I have-- let
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    me just show some examples here.
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    So let's say I have a
    triangle here that is 3, 2, 4,
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    and let's say we have
    another triangle here
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    that has length
    9, 6, and we also
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    know that the angle in
    between are congruent so
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    that that angle is
    equal to that angle.
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    What SAS in the
    similarity world tells
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    you is that these
    triangles are definitely
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    going to be similar
    triangles, that we're actually
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    constraining because there's
    actually only one triangle
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    we can draw a right over here.
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    It's the triangle
    where all the sides
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    are going to have to be
    scaled up by the same amount.
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    So there's only one long
    side right here that we
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    could actually draw,
    and that's going
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    to have to be scaled
    up by 3 as well.
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    This is the only
    possible triangle.
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    If you constrain this
    side you're saying, look,
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    this is 3 times that side, this
    is 3 three times that side,
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    and the angle between
    them is congruent,
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    there's only one
    triangle we could make.
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    And we know there is a
    similar triangle there
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    where everything is scaled
    up by a factor of 3,
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    so that one triangle
    we could draw
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    has to be that one
    similar triangle.
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    So this is what we're
    talking about SAS.
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    We're not saying that this
    side is congruent to that side
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    or that side is
    congruent to that side,
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    we're saying that they're
    scaled up by the same factor.
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    If we had another triangle
    that looked like this,
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    so maybe this is 9, this is
    4, and the angle between them
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    were congruent, you
    couldn't say that they're
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    similar because this side is
    scaled up by a factor of 3.
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    This side is only scaled
    up by a factor of 2.
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    So this one right over
    there you could not
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    say that it is
    necessarily similar.
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    And likewise if you had a
    triangle that had length 9 here
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    and length 6 there,
    but you did not
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    know that these two
    angles are the same,
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    once again, you're not
    constraining this enough,
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    and you would not know that
    those two triangles are
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    necessarily similar
    because you don't
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    know that middle
    angle is the same.
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    Now, you might be
    saying, well there
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    was a few other
    postulates that we had.
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    We had AAS when we
    dealt with congruency,
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    but if you think about
    it, we've already
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    shown that two
    angles by themselves
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    are enough to show similarity.
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    So why worry about an
    angle, an angle, and a side
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    or the ratio between a side?
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    So why even worry about that?
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    And we also had
    angle-side-angle in congruence,
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    but once again, we already
    know the two angles are enough,
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    so we don't need to
    throw in this extra side,
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    so we don't even need
    this right over here.
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    So these are going to be
    our similarity postulates,
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    and I want to remind
    you, side-side-side,
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    this is different than the
    side-side-side for congruence.
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    We're talking about the ratio
    between corresponding sides.
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    We're not saying that
    they're actually congruent.
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    And here, side-angle-side,
    it's different
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    than the side-angle-side
    for congruence.
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    It's this kind of
    related, but here we're
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    talking about the ratio
    between the sides, not
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    the actual measures.
Title:
Similarity Postulates
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Khan Academy
Duration:
12:14

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