The sum of the angles of a spherical triangle is greater than two and less than six right angles ; that is, greater than 180° and less than 540°. (gr). If A'B'C' is the polar triangle of ABC... Parliamentary Papers - Page 381by Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons - 1853Full view - About this book
| Edward Albert Bowser - Geometry - 1890 - 418 pages
...717. Sen. Two polar triangles are also called supple* mental triangles. Proposition 14. Theorem. 718. The sum of the angles of a. spherical triangle is greater than two, and less than six, right angles. Hyp. Let A, B, C denote the three Z s of the spherical A ABC. To prove... | |
| Edward Albert Bowser - Geometry - 1890 - 420 pages
...SCH. Two polar triangles are also called supplemental triangles. Proposition 14. Theorem. 718. TJie sum of the angles of a spherical triangle is greater than two, and less than six, right angles. Hyp. Let A, B, C denote the three Z s of the spherical A ABC. To prove... | |
| Seth Thayer Stewart - Geometry - 1891 - 426 pages
...spherical polygon is at a quadrant's distance from every point in the side. PROPOSITION XI. 57O. Theorem : The sum of the angles of a spherical triangle is greater than two, and less than six right angles. Statement : Let ABC be any spherical triangle. The sum of its angles... | |
| Dascom Greene - Astronomia esferica y practica - 1892 - 176 pages
...middle meridian. SPHEKICAL EXCESS or TRIANGLES ON THE EARTH'S SURFACE. 159. It is shown in geometry that the sum of the angles of a spherical triangle is greater than two right angles, and that the excess of this sum over two right angles is to eight right angles as the area of the triangle... | |
| William Chauvenet - 1893 - 340 pages
...of a convex spherical polygon is less than the circumference of a great circle. PROPOSITION XVIII. The sum of the angles of a spherical triangle is greater than two, and less than six, right angles. PROPOSITION XIX. Two symmetrical spherical triangles are equivalent.... | |
| Arthur Latham Baker - Geometry, Solid - 1893 - 150 pages
...Scholium. Polar triangles are sometimes called supplementary triangles. PROPOSITION XII. THEOREM. 280. The sum of the angles of a spherical triangle is greater than two, and less than six, right angles. Notation. Same as in § 278. To prove A + B+O 180° < 540°. Proof.... | |
| William C. Bartol - Geometry, Solid - 1893 - 112 pages
...Use the diagram of (209), and complete the demonstration by (45). PROPOSITION XXXIV. 211. THEOREM. The sum of the angles of a spherical triangle is greater than 180° and less than 540°. Now, A = 180° - B'C' . . . (205) and B = 180° - A'C' and C = 180° - A'B';... | |
| Charles Ambrose Van Velzer, George Clinton Shutts - Geometry - 1894 - 416 pages
...sides of a convex spherical polygon is less than the circumference of a great circle. PROPOSITION XXVI. The sum of the angles of a spherical triangle is greater than two and less than six right angles. PROPOSITION XXVII. Two symmetrical spherical triangles are equal in... | |
| American Mathematical Society - Mathematics - 1905 - 1032 pages
...the triangle can be read off as L. e., p. 595. pure spherics. The proof of the theorem (§ 567) — the sum of the angles of a spherical triangle is greater than two and less than six right angles — assumes that a spherical triangle is always positive. The theorem... | |
| Ephraim Miller - Plane trigonometry - 1894 - 222 pages
...90°. REMARK II. The functions of £a, $b, and $c, in [57] and [59], are real quantities. For since the sum of the angles of a spherical triangle is greater than 180°, and less than six right angles, then S, or $(A + В + C)- in [57] and [59], is greater than... | |
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