The largest angle in a triangle:

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In a triangle with sides 8.5, 6.8, and 9.4, the largest angle is opposite the longest side, which is 9.4. The cosine rule is an effective method for calculating the angles, confirming that the longest side corresponds to the largest angle. Discussions clarify that while it may seem possible for a long side to have a small opposite angle, this is incorrect in the context of triangle properties. For acute triangles, the law of sines supports that the longest side is opposite the largest angle, while for obtuse triangles, the largest angle must be the obtuse one. Overall, using the cosine rule is the correct approach to determine the largest angle in any triangle.
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I have a triangle, with sides 8.5, 6.8, and 9.4, what is the largest angle?

I think that it will always be the angle opposite the longest side, and used the cosine rule from there, along with trig identies to find the largest possible angle (<180).

Is this a correct method?
 
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Just use the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_cosines" to find each angle. Then you will be able to say which one is the biggest.
 
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You' re absolutely wrong! You can have a big side with a small angle as its opposite.
I think you'll have to calculate, no general way to do it. :)
 
Stick by the cosine rules and you'll be fine.
 
joelio36 said:
I have a triangle, with sides 8.5, 6.8, and 9.4, what is the largest angle?

I think that it will always be the angle opposite the longest side, and used the cosine rule from there, along with trig identies to find the largest possible angle (<180).

Is this a correct method?
Yes, in a given triangle the longest side is always opposite the largest angle. Just use the cosine rule for that side.

stingray78 said:
You' re absolutely wrong! You can have a big side with a small angle as its opposite.
I think you'll have to calculate, no general way to do it. :)
Sorry, but you are the one who is "absolutely wrong". You might be thinking that if the triangle is very large then a side opposite a small angle can be "big"- but in that case the other sides will be even larger.
 
stingray78 said:
You' re absolutely wrong! You can have a big side with a small angle as its opposite.
I think you'll have to calculate, no general way to do it. :)

The largest side is always opposite the largest angle. consider a triangle with angles
A,B and C and the side a opposite to the angle A etc.

For acute triangles you can get this from the law of sines: \frac{a}{sinA} = \frac{b}{sinB}, so if a>b then a/b>1 and so \frac{sinA}{sinB} &gt; 1 therefore sin(A) > sin(B). since sin is increasing from 0 to 90 degrees this implies A>B

For obtuse triangles there can be only one obtuse angle, which must be the largest. call this A. cos(A) < 0 sothe cosine rule tells us that a^2 > b^2 + c^2 and therefore a>b and a>c so the largest angle is also to the opposite of the largest side.

P.S. Is there a way to get tex fractions lined up with the line of text they are in?
 
Hehehe sorry, you're right. Didn't give it enough thinking. I was the one absolutely wrong. Sorry!
 
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