Constructible polygons | Euclidean plane geometry
In mathematics, a constructible polygon is a regular polygon that can be constructed with compass and straightedge. For example, a regular pentagon is constructible with compass and straightedge while a regular heptagon is not. There are infinitely many constructible polygons, but only 31 with an odd number of sides are known. (Wikipedia).
What are four types of polygons
👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1
From playlist Classify Polygons
👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1
From playlist Classify Polygons
👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1
From playlist Classify Polygons
What is the definition of a regular polygon and how do you find the interior angles
👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1
From playlist Classify Polygons
What is a polygon and what is a non example of a one
👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1
From playlist Classify Polygons
👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1
From playlist Classify Polygons
What are the names of different types of polygons based on the number of sides
👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1
From playlist Classify Polygons
What is the difference between a regular and irregular polygon
👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1
From playlist Classify Polygons
What is the difference between convex and concave
👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1
From playlist Classify Polygons
NAMING POLYGONS | What is the name of 69 sided polygon?
#namingpolygons #mathlesson #brainfeeding
From playlist Summer of Math Exposition Youtube Videos
Live CEOing Ep 195: Geometry in Wolfram Language
Watch Stephen Wolfram and teams of developers in a live, working, language design meeting. This episode is about Geometry in the Wolfram Language.
From playlist Behind the Scenes in Real-Life Software Design
This lecture is part of an online graduate course on Galois theory. As an application of Galois theory, we prove Gauss's theorem that it is possible to construct a regular heptadecagon with ruler and compass.
From playlist Galois theory
In this video I demonstrate how to construct regular polygons inscribed in a circle with a slider tool. This is extended to discovering Pi and is modeled after Archimedes Method of Exhaustion.
From playlist GeoGebra
Uniform Tilings of The Hyperbolic Plane (Lecture 4) by Subhojoy Gupta
ORGANIZERS : C. S. Aravinda and Rukmini Dey DATE & TIME: 16 June 2018 to 25 June 2018 VENUE : Madhava Lecture Hall, ICTS, Bangalore This workshop on geometry and topology for lecturers is aimed for participants who are lecturers in universities/institutes and colleges in India. This wi
From playlist Geometry and Topology for Lecturers
Miaofen Chen - Newton stratification and weakly admissible locus in p-adic Hodge theory
Correction: The affiliation of Lei Fu is Tsinghua University. Rapoport and Zink introduce the p-adic period domain (also called the admissible locus) inside the rigid analytic p-adic flag varieties. The weakly admissible locus is an approximation of the admissible locus in the sense that
From playlist Conférence « Géométrie arithmétique en l’honneur de Luc Illusie » - 5 mai 2021
To learn more about Wolfram Technology Conference, please visit: https://www.wolfram.com/events/technologyconference/ Speaker: Jaebum Jung Wolfram developers and colleagues discussed the latest in innovative technologies for cloud computing, interactive deployment, mobile devices, and mo
From playlist Wolfram Technology Conference 2017
👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1
From playlist Classify Polygons
MegaFavNumbers: The Largest Pierpont Prime
#MegaFavNumbers In this video, I talk about my favorite mega number. This is a number greater than 1000000 and I’m doing this as part of the MegaFavNumber project put on by many famous math YouTubers. My number specifically deals with the largest prime ever discovered relating to polygon
From playlist MegaFavNumbers