No - the interior angles of a polygon must total at least 360 degrees.
360 degrees. The exterior sum of angles of any polygon is always 360 degrees
The sum of the exterior angle and interior angle is 180°: → interior_angle + exterior_angle = 180 → exterior_angle = 180° - interior_angle In an equilateral triangle, each interior angle is 180° ÷ 3 = 60° → exterior_angle = 180° - 60° = 120° ---------------------------------------------------------- Alternatively: The sum of the exterior angles of a polygon is 360° For a regular polygon they are all the same size: → number_of_sides × exterior_angle = 360° → exterior_angle = 360° ÷ number_of_sides An equilateral triangle is a regular polygon with 3 sides: → exterior_angle = 360° ÷ 3 = 120°
The intuitive, but wrong, answer is that it must be regular. It need not be.For example, a hexagon with 6 angles, each measuring 120 degrees is not necessarily regular but it will tessellate. In fact, the angles could be(30, 120, 120, 120, 30, 300) degrees - a chevron, like an armed forces stripe, or(30, 30, 300, 30, 30, 300) degrees - a Z shape, or(90, 90, 90, 90, 90, 270) degrees. an L shape.
An angle of 300 degrees is a reflex angle.
A 360 sided polygon is known as a Trictohexacontagon. Tricto=300 Hexaconta=60
300
360 degrees. The exterior sum of angles of any polygon is always 360 degrees
180 degrees because each angle is 300
A angle of 300 degrees is a reflex angle
The sum of the exterior angle and interior angle is 180°: → interior_angle + exterior_angle = 180 → exterior_angle = 180° - interior_angle In an equilateral triangle, each interior angle is 180° ÷ 3 = 60° → exterior_angle = 180° - 60° = 120° ---------------------------------------------------------- Alternatively: The sum of the exterior angles of a polygon is 360° For a regular polygon they are all the same size: → number_of_sides × exterior_angle = 360° → exterior_angle = 360° ÷ number_of_sides An equilateral triangle is a regular polygon with 3 sides: → exterior_angle = 360° ÷ 3 = 120°
300 degrees
A 300 sided polygon is known as a trictogon
subtract each angle from 360. if the outside angles were 300, 270, and 330; the inside angles would be 60, 90, 30.
2x0+300 = 900 Solving the equation: 2x0 = 600 So the measures of the angles are: 90 degrees, 60 degrees and 30 degrees.
The intuitive, but wrong, answer is that it must be regular. It need not be.For example, a hexagon with 6 angles, each measuring 120 degrees is not necessarily regular but it will tessellate. In fact, the angles could be(30, 120, 120, 120, 30, 300) degrees - a chevron, like an armed forces stripe, or(30, 30, 300, 30, 30, 300) degrees - a Z shape, or(90, 90, 90, 90, 90, 270) degrees. an L shape.
its a trioscentalogram
300 degrees Fahrenheit = 148.8 degrees Celsius.