At a perfect right angle adjacent to the line and exactly half way along the line.
The perpendicular bisectors only intersect on the triangle when it is an isosceles right triangle.
The circumcenter.
yes, because perpendicular lines always intersect. all lines intersect unless they are parallel or on separate planes (skew)
a right triange
They are not. The perpendicular bisectors of a triangle, for example, intersect at the orthocentre of the triangle. So perpendicular lines can be intersecting and conversely.
The perpendicular bisectors only intersect on the triangle when it is an isosceles right triangle.
The circumcenter.
The three ANGLE bisectors of a triangle also bisect the sides, and intersect at a point INSIDE the triangle. The angle bisectors are not necessarily perpendicular to them. The perpendicular bisectors of the sides can intersect in a point either inside or outside the triangle, depending on the shape of the triangle.
circumcenter
Only at the midpoint of the hypotenuse.
It's the circumcenter.
The perpendicular bisectors of the sides of a triangle intersect at its circumcentre.
yes, because perpendicular lines always intersect. all lines intersect unless they are parallel or on separate planes (skew)
Since the intersection of the perpendicular bisectors of a triangle is the center of the inscribed circle (we call it the centroid of a triangle), the answer is no.
The three perpendicular bisectors (of the sides) of a triangle intersect at the circumcentre - the centre of the circle on which the three vertices of the triangle sit.
a right triange
The diagonals of a square are perpendicular (they intersect and form right angles). But they are angles bisectors since they bisect each pair of opposite angles. A perpendicular bisector actually bisects a side of a figure.