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Draw some angles inside a rectangle. What do you notice? Can you prove it?
Can you work out how these polygon pictures were drawn, and use that to figure out their angles?
Draw some stars and measure the angles at their points. Can you find and prove a result about their sum?
Is it possible to find the angles in this rather special isosceles triangle?
Join pentagons together edge to edge. Will they form a ring?
Interior angles can help us to work out which polygons will tessellate. Can we use similar ideas to predict which polygons combine to create semi-regular solids?
Draw some quadrilaterals on a 9-point circle and work out the angles. Is there a theorem?
Semi-regular tessellations combine two or more different regular polygons to fill the plane. Can you find all the semi-regular tessellations?
Can you find triangles on a 9-point circle? Can you work out their angles?
An equilateral triangle rotates around regular polygons and produces an outline like a flower. What are the perimeters of the different flowers?
Given an equilateral triangle inside an isosceles triangle, can you find a relationship between the angles?
Take a look at the photos of tiles at a school in Gibraltar. What questions can you ask about them?
Drawing the right diagram can help you to prove a result about the angles in a line of squares.
This LOGO Challenge emphasises the idea of breaking down a problem into smaller manageable parts. Working on squares and angles.
Creating designs with squares - using the REPEAT command in LOGO. This requires some careful thought on angles
Turn through bigger angles and draw stars with Logo.
More Logo for beginners. Learn to calculate exterior angles and draw regular polygons using procedures and variables.
Make different quadrilaterals on a nine-point pegboard, and work out their angles. What do you notice?
Show that among the interior angles of a convex polygon there cannot be more than three acute angles.
Given a regular pentagon, can you find the distance between two non-adjacent vertices?
Show how this pentagonal tile can be used to tile the plane and describe the transformations which map this pentagon to its images in the tiling.
Follow instructions to fold sheets of A4 paper into pentagons and assemble them to form a dodecahedron. Calculate the error in the angle of the not perfectly regular pentagons you make.
This article gives an wonderful insight into students working on the Arclets problem that first appeared in the Sept 2002 edition of the NRICH website.
How can you make an angle of 60 degrees by folding a sheet of paper twice?
The diagram shows a regular pentagon with sides of unit length. Find all the angles in the diagram. Prove that the quadrilateral shown in red is a rhombus.
The centre of the larger circle is at the midpoint of one side of an equilateral triangle and the circle touches the other two sides of the triangle. A smaller circle touches the larger circle and two sides of the triangle. If the small circle has radius 1 unit find the radius of the larger circle.
A floor is covered by a tessellation of equilateral triangles, each having three equal arcs inside it. What proportion of the area of the tessellation is shaded?
Triangle ABC has a right angle at C. ACRS and CBPQ are squares. ST and PU are perpendicular to AB produced. Show that ST + PU = AB
Prove that the internal angle bisectors of a triangle will never be perpendicular to each other.
The area of a regular pentagon looks about twice as a big as the pentangle star drawn within it. Is it?