find the missing angle!!

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  • Опубликовано: 26 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 152

  • @-AHoangAnhKhoa
    @-AHoangAnhKhoa 2 месяца назад +156

    No Good Place To Stop😢😢😢

    • @graf_paper
      @graf_paper 2 месяца назад +6

      I really felt the absence of this.

  • @joseluishablutzelaceijas928
    @joseluishablutzelaceijas928 2 месяца назад +98

    An alternative (purely geometric) solution could look as follows. As angle ADB is equal to 45° and angle ACB is equal to 30°, the angle CAD is equal to 15°. If one joins point D with a point E on AC such that angle ADE is equal to 15°, then |AE| = |ED| = |DC| = |BD| and angle DEC is equal to 30°, which implies that angle BDE is equal to 60° and due to |DB| = |DE| that triangle BDE is equilateral and that the angle BEC is equal to 90°. As |AE| = |EB| and the angle BEA is equal to 90° (180° - [angle BEC]), the triangle BEC is a right and isosceles triangle and, as a consequence, the angle BAC is equal to 45°, which implies that the angle BAD is equal to 30°.

    • @gp-ht7ug
      @gp-ht7ug 2 месяца назад +12

      I was posting the same solution
      I use to solve geometric problems with geometry

    • @sp_danger1729
      @sp_danger1729 2 месяца назад +10

      If I'm not mistaken right at the end you should be referring to triangle BEA as the right isosceles triangle. Nice work nonetheless🙌

    • @avhuf
      @avhuf 2 месяца назад +10

      purely geometric, always a more elegant solution in my book.

    • @maxhagenauer24
      @maxhagenauer24 2 месяца назад +3

      Definity not as easy or as simple as the trigonometric way.

    • @THLee-fw9hb3dw5c
      @THLee-fw9hb3dw5c 2 месяца назад +1

      good

  • @ianfowler9340
    @ianfowler9340 2 месяца назад +51

    I must admit I shook my head when I saw the thumbnail - not enough information! The equal sides are not given in the diagram. Anyway, I let y = AD instead,

    • @plislegalineu3005
      @plislegalineu3005 2 месяца назад +3

      You could get sin(15) from sin(30) = 1/2, if not with a half angle formula then with a system of equations coming from the double angle formula and the pythagorean identity

    • @urnoob5528
      @urnoob5528 2 месяца назад +5

      wym exact value
      it can be found from the trig table for 30 45 60 degrees
      by using the sum formula for trig, sin(45-30)

    • @MushookieMan
      @MushookieMan 2 месяца назад +3

      That's the mathematical version of clickbait

    • @bonzinip
      @bonzinip 2 месяца назад +2

      Yes, the trick is that there are two equal sides, the second being AD, and that's enough for sides to cancel out when applying the sine law on the two triangles. Here is my solution:
      - using the sine law BD/sin 15 = AD/sin 30 and BD/sin θ = AD / sin (135-θ)
      - dividing the corresponding sides and rearranging gives a single equation, sin(135-θ) / sin θ = sin 30 / sin 15 = 2*cos 15
      - the difference law gives √2/2 (sin θ + cos θ) / sin θ = 2*cos 15
      - finally, expanding the left side gives cot θ = √2*2*cos 15 - 1 = √2*2*cos (45-30) - 1 = √2*2*√2/2*(√3/2 + 1/2) - 1 = √3 + 1 - 1 = √3.

    • @ianfowler9340
      @ianfowler9340 2 месяца назад +1

      @@bonzinip That is pretty much exactly what I did! Well done.

  • @papafragen2623
    @papafragen2623 2 месяца назад +28

    Draw a circle around D with radius |DC|. Let the intersection of the circle with AC be E.
    According to Thales' theorem, triangle BCE has the angles 30, 90 and 60.
    Since |BD| = |DE|, triangle BDE is equilateral.
    Since angle DAE and angle EDA are 15 degrees, |AE| = |ED| = |EB| and therefore triangle BEA is isosceles.
    Therefore angle theta is 45-15 = 30 degrees (base angles triangle BEA are (180-90)/2 = 45 degrees).

    • @robert-skibelo
      @robert-skibelo 2 месяца назад +4

      Very elegant.

    • @geralds361
      @geralds361 Месяц назад +2

      @@activatewindows7415 This solution doesn't require accurate drawing. It is the most elegant solution, because it doesn't need any trigonometric identities - just Thales theorem and elementary geometry.

    • @themartian7121
      @themartian7121 20 дней назад

      Very nice!

  • @Generalist18
    @Generalist18 2 месяца назад +14

    Michael if you want to improve your geometry you need to give up analytic solutions don’t fall into the trap I fell into,solve them geometrically it’s tricky but it’s worth it because you gain better insights of finding key points which leads to more elegant and less messy solutions..Another issue with analytic solutions is that when solving more complex geo problems you often stumble upon 4th and higher degree polynomials which are usually not possible to solve,for example try the generalized ladder and square problem from mind your decisions analytically-completely impossible.lastly geometric solution are just more satisfying as they are require more creativity and less brute force.

  • @ib9rt
    @ib9rt Месяц назад +5

    When presented with a geometry problem, turning it into algebra is like taking a long and complicated detour to get to the destination, rather than taking the freeway. It is really much more elegant and satisfying to solve this problem using theorems from geometry.

  • @cvkline
    @cvkline 2 месяца назад +39

    I guess that wasn't a good place to stop.

  • @BigParadox
    @BigParadox Месяц назад +2

    The logical way to start is ususlly to fill in complimentary angles and the angles that directly follow from sum of angles in a triangle is 180 degrees.

  • @Bodyknock
    @Bodyknock 2 месяца назад +9

    Neat problem. 🙂 The only minor thing I noticed in the video is, the way he wrote and drew everything, he assumed point E fell outside the triangle, but at least in principle going into the problem at first you don’t actually know if E is outside the triangle or if it lies on the line segment BD.
    I don’t think this is a big deal though, it just means that y in the first part of the proof might be negative as well as the corresponding small angle. That doesn’t seem to change any of the algebra though, and in fact as shown in the video when you solve for x/y you get a positive ratio instead of a negative one which means y is in fact positive and therefore outside the triangle.

    • @monzurrahman8307
      @monzurrahman8307 2 месяца назад +1

      He does say that angle ABD is not 90°, so if you can assume the angle of 45 and lengths are correct, theta can't be 45° also then. Therefore, to extend theta to 45°, you would need E to be outside of the original triangle.

    • @ruilopes6638
      @ruilopes6638 2 месяца назад +2

      I believe it doesn’t really matter. If it were to fall inside the triangle everything would hold but y would be negative

    • @Alan-zf2tt
      @Alan-zf2tt 2 месяца назад

      I have seen problems like these where a rough sketch makes it look like 90 degrees when in fact it can be 88 to 92 degrees excluding 90 degrees. It is a way to challenge a drawn solution over an analytic solution based, as you observe, on some grounded foundation principles

    • @udic01
      @udic01 2 месяца назад

      ​@monzurrahman8307 if you extend the angle then of course it is correct.
      But how do you know that theta is not bigger than 45?

    • @Alan-zf2tt
      @Alan-zf2tt 2 месяца назад

      @@monzurrahman8307 It is a good point for sure. Is the angle obtuse or acute? I suppose an alternative approach is to use differential calculus on an assumption that a line drawn from BDC passing through point B will be at its shortest length when it is perpendicular to the line.
      Think describing an arc with compass point centered on point B.
      But then we have to factor in that point D bisects line BC and this actually anchors point E as an extension to line BC.
      Try drawing it with ruler, compass and protractor either on screen or on paper (I think paper is the best for hands on)
      Share your findings here?

  • @BMusic-hr1rz
    @BMusic-hr1rz Месяц назад +2

    Honestly:
    Without loss of generality put midpoint of equal lengths at origin, line along x axis, equal lengths = 1. Solve for intersection of lines
    y = -(1/sqrt(3))(x-1)
    y = -(x+1)
    No pythagoras, no dropped perpendiculars, no tan angle addition identities

  • @urnoob5528
    @urnoob5528 2 месяца назад +4

    without drawing anything extra
    just use law of sines, u get two equations and u solve for the theta variable only
    a/sin(A) = b/sin(B), A = theta + 15degrees, B = 180degrees - 45degrees - theta, sin(B) further simplified to sin(theta + 45degrees) by removing the negatives
    so u have 2 equations
    a/sin(theta + 15degrees) = b/sin(theta +45degrees)
    b/sin(135degrees) = 0.5a/sin(15degrees)
    substitute a or b, and the other will also be eliminated, leaving theta to be solved for
    no calculators needed, just the table for 30 45 60 degrees and the angle sum formula
    u need to find the ratio of sin to cos and then solve for tan from the table, giving 30 degrees as the answer (need to simplify and rationalize all the square roots to get the table value)

    • @Jouzou87
      @Jouzou87 Месяц назад

      This would've been my approach as well. Felt like it was made unnecessarily complicated in the video.

  • @xunningyue9901
    @xunningyue9901 2 месяца назад +2

    That is a very classic geometry problem. Here is one alternative solution in pure geometric construction. Suppose point P be the symmetric point of D about the line AC, we get a regular ΔCPD and BD=CD=PD. Note that ∠DBP = ∠DPB = ∠CDP/2 = 30⁰, and ∠DAP = 2∠CAD = 30⁰ = ∠DBP, it follows that A/B/D/P are co-cyclic. Therefore, the θ = ∠BAD = ∠BPD = 30⁰

    • @stephenhamer8192
      @stephenhamer8192 2 месяца назад

      Beautiful solution! But some obscurities. In particular, why is angle DPB = CPD/2?
      I got triangle CBP is equilateral. Then from DC=DB=DP, P is on the semicircle with D as centre and CB as diameter, so angle CPB is a right-angle; whence angle DBP = angle DPB = 90 - 60 = 30
      Or (more in the spirit of your thinking), angle DBP = angle DPB (isosceles triangle) = 1/2 x angle CPD = 30 (angle at centre of circ on CPD vs angle at circumference)

  • @almenarab
    @almenarab 2 месяца назад +17

    I used law of sines

    • @averageboulderer
      @averageboulderer 2 месяца назад +3

      Same. It was a painful derivation involving completing the squares and cosine of 15 degrees.

  • @Alan-zf2tt
    @Alan-zf2tt 2 месяца назад +4

    The worst problems like this usually include a sketch that looks to be a right angle but may be 87 to 93 degrees or even worse: 88 to 92 degrees
    Just a suggestion going forward: is it reasonable to do several (linked?) videos on this problem and solution solving?
    My reasoning is that viewers and student may (will?) find it helpful to see several ways to solve this problem.
    I hope that is a reasonable way for learners to find their preferred working methods aware that several options do exist bringing awareness of wider solution solving in general

  • @WalterMcKenzie-t1w
    @WalterMcKenzie-t1w 2 месяца назад +1

    Much easier by using law of sines. For the larger triangle, Sin (a+15)/2x = sin 30/z and using the smaller triangle, sin 45/z = sin a/x. Simplfying, we get inverse cot of 1.732 which is 30 degrees. ATAGPTS

  • @tommychau1211
    @tommychau1211 2 месяца назад

    I used sine laws
    theta = 30

  • @urnoob5528
    @urnoob5528 2 месяца назад +10

    the way u wrote the bracket for the last tangent equation there was wrong

  • @gusmichel7035
    @gusmichel7035 Месяц назад

    I did the same construction of E, and used an angle sum formula, but more simply for both parts.
    As no lengths or areas are required, without loss of generality, define AE=1. By well known ratios for 30°-60°-90° and 45°-45°-90° triangles, EC=√3 and ED=1. DC=EC-ED=√3-1, but BD=DC, so BD=√3-1. EB=ED-BD=1-(√3-1)=2-√3. I'm sort of synced up here with Dr Penn at 6:15, same ratios expressed differently.
    Defining φ=∠EAB, tanφ=(2-√3)/1.=2-√3. I suspected φ=15°, and a quick check on a calculator indicated this was worth pursuing. Rather than use a half angle formula and have to untangle nested square roots, I opted to work up and calculated tan(2φ)=2tanφ/(1+tan²φ) = 2(2-√3)/(1+(2-√3)²) = (4-2√3)/(1+4+4√3+3) = (4--2√3)/(8-4√3) = (4--2√3)/2(4--2√3) = ½. So 2φ is either 30° or 210°, and only 30° makes sense for the diagram, so indeed φ=15°. Clearly φ+θ=45° from ⊿ADE, so θ=30°.
    And IMHO, that's a good place to stop.

  • @MathMan271
    @MathMan271 2 месяца назад +7

    I'm still going...

  • @tassiedevil2200
    @tassiedevil2200 Месяц назад

    Impressed by the pure geometry solutions posted. Like several others, I was drawn to the sine rule approach. Using it on triangle ACD to show that |AD|=|AC|/Sqrt[2] and then applying it to triangles ABD and ABC and eliminating sine of angle ABD leaves sin(theta)=sin(theta+15)/Sqrt[2]. Rather than hammering this out with addition formulae and tan or cot, in this case (particularly recalling sin(45) =1/Sqrt[2]), theta is 30 degrees by inspection.

  • @BMusic-hr1rz
    @BMusic-hr1rz 2 месяца назад +1

    Set the two equal lengths = 1 and solve for the line intersection point coordinates instead.

  • @graf_paper
    @graf_paper Месяц назад

    I solved the problem in a totally different way, using the sin and cos laws to complete each triangle. It definitely felt like a less clever solution but it was super satisfying and a really great way to review a bunch of elementary trig. Definitely keeping this problem in my back pocket for students!!

  • @carvelbell181
    @carvelbell181 27 дней назад

    Excellent tutorial. I learn something from your approach to this specific problem.

  • @CM63_France
    @CM63_France 2 месяца назад +2

    Hi,
    10:33 : missing "and that's a good place to stop".

  • @wertigon
    @wertigon Месяц назад

    Aight... Math time. The triangle ADC can easily give the three angles as 135 + 30 + 15, and the triangle ABD has angles theta, 45, and 180-45-theta.
    Now let's use the law of sines. For any triangle with corners ABC, sin(A)/BC = sin(B) / AC = sin(C) / AB
    Since AD is shared between the two triangles, this simplifies to these two equations. Let y = AD and x = BD = DC
    sin(theta) / x = sin(180 - 45 - theta) / y
    sin(15) / x = sin(30) / y
    since sin(180-theta) = sin(theta):
    x = y*sin(theta) / sin(45 - theta)
    x = y*sin(15) / sin(30)
    Combine both, and...
    y*sin(theta) / sin(45 - theta) = y*sin(15) / sin(30)
    sin(theta) / sin(45 - theta) = sin(15) / sin(30)
    theta = 15

  • @Robert_H.
    @Robert_H. Месяц назад +1

    DAC = 180° - DBA = 180° - 45° = 135°
    ACD = 180° - DAC - CDA = 180° - 135° - 30° = 15°
    ACB = 180° - CBA - BAC = 180° - 30° - BAC = 150° - BAC
    ACB = ADB + ACD = ADB + 15°
    BAD = 180° - DBA - ADB = 180° - 45° - ADB = 135° - ADB
    Three Equations with using BAD = BAC:
    (1) ACB + BAC = 150°
    (2) ACB - ADB = 15°
    (3) BAC + ADB = 135°
    (1) - (2) BAC + ADB = 135°
    I just realized that D should be exactly in the middle of AB when I let the video play for 5 seconds :D I was just wondering why my system of equations is underdetermined.

  • @paramdandekar562
    @paramdandekar562 2 месяца назад

    what i did was to find the angle EAB, which is arctan(y/(x+y)) which comes out to 15°, and then just subtract that from 45°; by that method you don't have to rationalise denominators etc anywhere

  • @fredgalvin9098
    @fredgalvin9098 Месяц назад

    Let b = angle EAB, d = angle EAB, C = angle EAC, so theta = d - b.
    tan(c) = tan(60) = sqrt(3).
    tan(d) = tan(45) = 1.
    tan(c) - tan(d) = tan(d) - tan(b), so tan(b) = 2*tan(d) - tan(c) = 2 - sqrt(3).
    tan(theta) = tan(d - b) = (tan(d) - tan(b)) / (1 + tan(b)tan(d)) = ... = 1/sqrt(3) = tan(30).

  • @59de44955ebd
    @59de44955ebd Месяц назад +1

    My only marginally different solution was to set the x in the video to 1, without loss of generality, which then immediately gave me tan 60° = sqrt(3) = (y + 2)/(y + 1), and therefor y = (sqrt(3) - 1) / 2.
    This then implied that atan(angle EAB) = y / (y + 1) = 2 - sqrt(3), and therefor angle EAB = 15°, and therefor theta = 45° - 15° = 30°.

  • @lapaget1
    @lapaget1 Месяц назад

    From the law of sines, x being the unknown, sin(x+15)=sin(x)/sin(45)
    => Dividing both sides by cos(x), the equation becomes tan(x)/sin(45)=cos(15).tan(x)+sin(15)
    => tan(x)=sin(15).sin(45)/(1-cos(15)sin(45))
    Finally, tan(x)=1/sqrt(3) and x=30

  • @marsgal42
    @marsgal42 2 месяца назад +5

    ...and that's a good place to stop!

  • @MrAndrzer
    @MrAndrzer Месяц назад +1

    Zwięźle wytłumaczone bez niepotrzebnego rozwlekania.

  • @ez4214
    @ez4214 Месяц назад

    A Simple way is to draw a height line BE, the height is the same as BD and DE (because BEC on the same circle, C is the center). So angle EAD equals angle EDA. So DE=EA=EB. So angle CAB=45 so angle dab=30

  • @udic01
    @udic01 2 месяца назад +9

    Thats like solving a quadratic equation with calculus.
    If this is a geometric problem, then it should be solved in ageometric way.
    Second, how do you know apriori that point e is not in cd? (You have to prove this part, since drawings are sometimes misleading.)

    • @Generalist18
      @Generalist18 2 месяца назад

      I also had this habit of solving geometry problems with trigonometry,I missed a lot of insight because of this

    • @urnoob5528
      @urnoob5528 2 месяца назад +1

      the fuck u mean point e is in cd
      because he made it not be in cd, u dont need to prove a fucking placeholder variable, e is that point specifically set outside
      i can let f=10 and i dont need to prove that because i made it up to solve things ffs, f in this case is a placeholder the same as e in this video
      and unless u r blind and have no common sense, how the fuck can e be in cd? they are like 2 light years apart, this is literally a visual problem, not some quantum bullshit

    • @urnoob5528
      @urnoob5528 2 месяца назад +1

      BRO U DONT NEED TO BE A GENIUS TO KNOW E IS NOT IN CD
      THEY ARE LITERALLY 2 LIGHT YEARS APART
      AND IF U MEAN BD, THEN U DONT NEED TO KNOW, BECAUSE IT DONT EVEN MATTER, THE PROCEDURE DOESNT EVEN CHANGE

    • @jay_sensz
      @jay_sensz 2 месяца назад +1

      The way the equations are set up, we would get a negative value for x/y if E was on BC, which we don't.

    • @jay_sensz
      @jay_sensz 2 месяца назад

      @@jaspermcjasper3672 Why? That's a basic fact of geometry and not unique to this particular problem.

  • @mathewpv681
    @mathewpv681 Месяц назад

    This problem can be solved without any construction. As we see that AD is a median of triangle ABC it divides the triangle into two with equal areas. Since angle CAD is 15, using sine formulas for area of the triangles in two different ways and remembering that angle ABC is (180 - (theta + 45)) we get four equations for the area of triangles. Which can be solved very easily for tan theta. Without so much of mathematical jugglery.

  • @Cutestar6757
    @Cutestar6757 Месяц назад +1

    Can we solve this by drawing a parallel line to BC passing through point A and then using supplementary and complementary angle rules for parallel lines..I am getting stuck though idk

    • @rarhs
      @rarhs Месяц назад

      I was thinking like you but not yet successful.

    • @themartian7121
      @themartian7121 20 дней назад

      @@rarhs Cleanest shortest geometric solution posted by @papafragen above - Uses 1 circle construction followed by Thales theorem and isoceles theorems...done.

  • @JonasJankauskas
    @JonasJankauskas 2 месяца назад

    Drop a perpendicular BH to AC and observe that triangle BHD is equilateral. Notice that angle ADH is 15 degrees, so that triange ADH is isosceles and AH = DH=BD. Hence, points A, B, D lie on the circle centered at H. The inscribed angle BAD then is equal to one half of the 60 degree central angle BHD, that is, 30 degrees.

  • @vishalmishra3046
    @vishalmishra3046 Месяц назад

    Let T = theta. AD is common side of 2 triangles and BD = DC, so *sine rule* can solve this problem in the simplest way. Angle B = 180 - 45 - T = 135 - T and Angle DAC = 45 - 30 = 15.
    Therefore, using *sine rule* sin(135-T) / sin T = sin(30) / sin(15) = (1/2) / [(√3-1) / 2√2] = (√3+1)/√2
    sin(135-T) = sin(45+T) = (sin T + cos T)/√2 = sin T (1 + cot T)/√2
    Therefore, (√3+1)/√2 = sin(135-T) / sin T = (1 + cot T)/√2, so cot T = √3, so *theta = T = 30 deg*

  • @alvingoodman6539
    @alvingoodman6539 8 дней назад

    I just started on the problem and then asked AI what the answer is. She told me in about 3 seconds so that is how I am going to work the problem. I will never have to do this problem in my everyday life and I really need to mow the yard and do some other things so I really like asking AI. After all, isn’t that why we even have computers in the first place to make our lives easier. I need to figure some income tax info too so I think I will use TurboTax and then I will have time to also do the grass edging after I mow.

  • @MorgKev
    @MorgKev Месяц назад

    The pure geometry method is much more satisfying... and if you are lucky enough to construct the perpendicular from B to AC (call the new point E) and then join ED... it all falls nicely into place. Mind you, I did flail around for a while before trying that.

  • @Mathguy1729
    @Mathguy1729 2 месяца назад

    Faster way to solve:
    B=135-θ (angle sum of triangle)
    ∠DAC=15 (angle sum of triangle)
    Set BD=CD=1 unit
    AD=0.5csc15 (sine law)
    2sin(135-θ)sin15=sinθ (sine law)
    tanθ=(√(2)sin15)/(1-√(2)sin15)
    tanθ=1/√3
    θ=30

  • @JustNow42
    @JustNow42 Месяц назад

    My math teacher in high-school asked us how does on solve math problems? But nobody could answer including the teacher. Many years later, helping old people to use their phones and young how to do math, I realised the solution. The secret using phones are the same as solving math problems. It is very simple: Do something regardles what. ( don't just sit there and look at it ) . It sounds silly but when you do something it may be wrong or not help but that only means do something else regardless what. This way you can solve all problems. I am now 82 year old retired technical director, I tell you this is true.

  • @adulis73
    @adulis73 Месяц назад

    Using law of sines:
    tan ? = (sin45*sin15)/(1-sin45*cos15)
    tan ? = 1/sqrt(3)

  • @YourTDSisCurable
    @YourTDSisCurable 13 дней назад

    that bottom left angle is 90+15 degrees = 105 degrees. Total degrees are 180, so (using the 45 degree and 30 degree ratio) the top angle must be 45 degrees total and the unknown angle must be 2/3 of the 45 degrees or 30 degrees. It's been a while since I delved into geometry so I've forgotten much of the nomenclature, but not the process.
    Trigonometry is for losers....(kidding).
    3x2(9yz)4a

  • @junioranthony6035
    @junioranthony6035 Месяц назад

    After reading some of the comments, I’m thinking pure luck I got the 30 degree answer. Geez I’m glad I will never have to be in a geometry class or a calculus class ever again. And my grandkids can go online for help.

  • @sanjogar
    @sanjogar 3 дня назад

    I found a shorter solution. If x = BD = DC, and y = AB, By the Law of Sines in triangles ABD and ABC, sin θ/x = sin 45°/y and sin (θ+15°)/(2x) = sin 30°/y. Dividing both members, we can eliminate easily x and y, and then sin (θ+15°) sin 45° = sin θ. This equation has the obvious solution 30° because sin 30° = 1/2 = (1/√2)² = sin² 45°. You can solve the last equation doing some tricks I could post.

    • @sanjogar
      @sanjogar 3 дня назад

      I never recall the exact values of sin 15° and cos 15°, so I did the following.
      Recall that sin (θ+15°) sin 45° = sin θ, thus -sin (θ+15°) sin 45° = -2sin θ. Then, cos (θ+60°)-cos(θ-30°) = - 2 sin θ. Expanding the left side, etc. we find 1/2 (3-√3) sin θ = 1/2 (√3-1) cos θ.
      Simplifying, tan θ = 1/√3, so θ = atan (1/√3) = 30°.

  • @junioranthony6035
    @junioranthony6035 Месяц назад

    Ok. I’m no math genius. And by the time you were done, I was lost and confused. But I realized that the angle was thirty degrees. And I did that using the calculator on my iPhone. And that’s what you ended up with, while making me feel like how I felt in math classes through primary school to college. Blank stare on my face and huh? I mean it took me less than a minute.

  • @vcvartak7111
    @vcvartak7111 Месяц назад

    Using sine rule is perhaps more easy since AD is common for 2 triangle and BD is CD . So we get equation in sin(Theta)

  • @holyshit922
    @holyshit922 2 месяца назад

    Determine angle measures in ADC
    Use law of sines
    Convert to tangent
    theta = 30

  • @rajatmagic
    @rajatmagic Месяц назад

    How do we know (without drawing it out) that E lies outside BC?

  • @J4UMZ4UM
    @J4UMZ4UM Месяц назад

    From law of sines:
    x/sin⁡(45) =1/sin⁡(θ)
    x/sin⁡(30) =2/sin⁡(θ+15)
    sin⁡(45)/sin⁡(θ) =1/sin⁡(θ+15)
    sin⁡(θ)=sin⁡(45) sin⁡(θ+15)
    Let a=θ-30
    sin⁡(a+30)=sin⁡(45) sin⁡(45+a)
    sin⁡(a) cos⁡(30)+cos⁡(a) sin⁡(30)=sin⁡(45) (sin⁡(a) cos⁡(45)+cos⁡(a) sin⁡(45))
    sin⁡(a) cos⁡(30)+cos⁡(a) sin⁡(30) = 1/2 (sin(a) + cos(a))
    2 sin⁡(a) cos⁡(30)=sin⁡(a)
    sin⁡(a)=0
    -> a=0 -> θ=30

  • @michaeldeeth811
    @michaeldeeth811 2 месяца назад

    Michael, you are the greatest master of using colored chalk. Nobody seemed to notice that you incorrectly applied a parenthesis at 9:15.

    • @robert-skibelo
      @robert-skibelo 2 месяца назад

      Actually urnoob5528 noticed about 16 hours before you. But the primitive layout of RUclips comments makes it pretty difficult to notice such things.

  • @jotajaviergonzalezgarcia7504
    @jotajaviergonzalezgarcia7504 2 месяца назад

    is a good place to stop?

  • @flarklooney
    @flarklooney Месяц назад

    This video got me to thinking about other contructable whole numbered angles. I tried google but couldn't find any site that has a complete list of the possible angles that can be constructed. (1°~180°)

  • @davewolfy2906
    @davewolfy2906 Месяц назад

    Agatha Christie moment, B-D and C-D are the same length.
    New character who arrives on the next to last page "who did it".
    Crap, actually.

  • @Misteribel
    @Misteribel Месяц назад

    And that's a great place to stop!!! ❤

  • @chrissquarefan86
    @chrissquarefan86 Месяц назад

    I used a geometric approach using basic gymnasium level geometry

  • @cheeseparis1
    @cheeseparis1 Месяц назад +1

    And that's a good place to stop.

  • @yerel_nimni_avni
    @yerel_nimni_avni 2 месяца назад

    I don't get how you neglect the option of y=0 base only on the drawing

  • @TheNizzer
    @TheNizzer Месяц назад

    Bit easier using Sine Rule. 10 lines max.

  • @sharifulalam3366
    @sharifulalam3366 13 дней назад

    45°=

  • @danxie-mg8yv
    @danxie-mg8yv Месяц назад

    set AE=1;DE=1;AC=2;CE=3^-2;BE=2-3^-2;EAB=15;BAD=30

  • @Anti-You
    @Anti-You Месяц назад

    Forgot the first step: convert to radians.

  • @sventheviking4635
    @sventheviking4635 Месяц назад

    Way too complicated! This was a 20 second problem. We can apply numerical values to the sides since we have 30˚. AC = 4, AE = 2, BD = DC = √3 -x. ED = x+√3=AE = 2, EB=2x, EAB = arc tan 2-√3 = 15˚, since EAB = DAC = 15˚, therefore BAD = 30˚.

  • @leonvanheerden9174
    @leonvanheerden9174 Месяц назад

    A "pen to paper" solution would have been far easier to follow.

  • @digitalindian6993
    @digitalindian6993 Месяц назад

    Uncle ji
    Total angle
    180 - addition of both the angles
    Theta +beta
    Means
    180-75 = 105
    105-75= 30
    😂😂

  • @ДімаБогданов-ъ8ш
    @ДімаБогданов-ъ8ш 2 месяца назад

    No good place to stop?

  • @ez4214
    @ez4214 Месяц назад

    I mean D is the center of circle

  • @utube460
    @utube460 Месяц назад

    You gave half info in thumbnail and did not say BD=DC.
    Not fair ! 😔

  • @ironbutterfly3701
    @ironbutterfly3701 2 месяца назад

    Isn’t it far easier to just put equations of both lines we know slopes and their intercept. See where they intersect

  • @antosandras
    @antosandras 2 месяца назад

    At 9:18 the closing paranthesis goes to the wrong place.

  • @PrithwirajSen-nj6qq
    @PrithwirajSen-nj6qq 24 дня назад

    Up-to 3-17 may take ur solution.

  • @mynamesgus4295
    @mynamesgus4295 2 месяца назад

    amazing problem

  • @youssefelyousfi4929
    @youssefelyousfi4929 Месяц назад

    tan(ô)=(sin15)(sin45)/((sin30)-(sin15)(sin45)) so ô=30°

  • @_Mentat
    @_Mentat 4 дня назад

    Clickbait! It's made to look impossible because D being the midpoint is not a given until suddenly it is.

  • @aljawad
    @aljawad 2 месяца назад +1

    By inspection, angle CDA =135 degrees, so angle DAC =15 degrees. Applying the law of sines yields the dimensions AD & AC with respect to X. Then apply the law of cosine to triangle ABC (with the obtained value of AC, BC = 2X and the angle between them = 30 degrees) to find AB (alternatively: apply the law of cosines to ABD with the obtained value of AD, BD=X and angle BDA=45 degrees). Now apply the law of sines: X/ sin(theta) = AB/ sin(45).

  • @penghapuspensil
    @penghapuspensil Месяц назад

    Oooh, jalannya ngeliat monitor di bawah toh ternyata.. Hmm...

  • @subscriberunavailable
    @subscriberunavailable Месяц назад

    Impressive

  • @Geoff_G
    @Geoff_G Месяц назад

    I hate it when the question in the thumbnail isn't the question answered in the video.

    • @TimothyReeves
      @TimothyReeves Месяц назад

      it's enough to easily get it from 180-45-30=105 (missing angle)

    • @Geoff_G
      @Geoff_G Месяц назад

      @@TimothyReeves That is the sum of the two angles at the top, not the missing angle.

  • @OzchOzch
    @OzchOzch 15 дней назад

    You build the answer about wrong assuming bd=dc

  • @ravishankarpulyasambasivan6831
    @ravishankarpulyasambasivan6831 Месяц назад

    its 15 deg

  • @riyatmoko8241
    @riyatmoko8241 Месяц назад

    75.

  • @roberttelarket4934
    @roberttelarket4934 2 месяца назад

    A good place to be confused!

  • @محمدذكىمحمدزناتى-ن7غ

    45

  • @Eyup-oz5zu
    @Eyup-oz5zu 6 дней назад

    Very very very …long solve

  • @magnusqwerty
    @magnusqwerty Месяц назад

    BD=DC

  • @constancemasawi2924
    @constancemasawi2924 Месяц назад

    Not good. Much more confusing

  • @DhdhBdhx-m4z
    @DhdhBdhx-m4z Месяц назад

    Sancs

  • @MarcusAndersonsBlog
    @MarcusAndersonsBlog 2 месяца назад

    Its 30 degrees by inspection - no need for trig. At D, 180-45=135. Then DAC = 180-135-30 = 15. Because the diagram is drawn accurately, its is pretty obvious that ABC is most likely DAC plus 90, so ABC = 105. Therefore the unknown angle is 180-105-45 = 30. This is the same way both AI and genius works. Educated (or statistical) guessing (or approximation) to compensate for uncertainty.

  • @georgeglonti5380
    @georgeglonti5380 Месяц назад

    Stupid solition. I have solved it in my mind in 10 secs using triangle angles sum equals 180 degree rule.

  • @harrymatabal8448
    @harrymatabal8448 Месяц назад

    ?? Degrees 😂

  • @yosephlupu9067
    @yosephlupu9067 11 дней назад

    ruclips.net/video/H8SOQxsRWig/видео.html

  • @bennoarchimboldi6245
    @bennoarchimboldi6245 2 месяца назад

    Off topic but since you’ve completed the Lie algebras playlist on the MathMajor channel, are you planning on creating more playlists on algebra-related topics like Galois theory?