Yes
If two angles are equal, they're called congruent angles.
Similarities between angle bisector and perpendicular bisector: Perpendicular bisector bisects a line segment into two equal parts at 90°. Angle bisector bisects an creating two congruent angles they both bisect into equal parts! =)
Always equal to or less than the smaller number, yes.
An equilateral triangle has 3 equal angles and 3 equal sides. The angles add up to 1800 and there are 3 equal angles so each is 600an equilateral triangle
Yes, two things that are the same are always equal.
yes, angle of friction is equal to angle of repose.
Angle of repose is equal to angle of friction.
Angel of repose is different from the angel of friction; however in a particular case it may be the same. Basically angle of repose is an engineering property of granular materials. It is the maximum angle of a stable slope determined by friction, cohesion and the shapes of the particles. When bulk granular materials are poured onto a horizontal surface, a conical pile will form. The internal angle between the surface of the pile and the horizontal surface is known as the angle of repose and is related to the density, surface area and shapes of the particles, and the coefficient of friction of the material. Material with a low angle of repose forms flatter piles than material with a high angle of repose. In other words, the angle of repose is the angle a pile forms with the ground. While angel of friction is the angle between the noemal force and athe resultant between tha normal force and friction force.
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The angle of friction is the angle at which a body will start sliding on a surface. It is equal to the arctangent of the coefficient of static friction between the two surfaces in contact.
The angle of friction is the angle at which an object on a surface is on the verge of sliding. The coefficient of friction is a measure of the resistance to sliding between two surfaces. The tangent of the angle of friction is equal to the coefficient of friction between the surfaces.
The angle of incidence always equals the angle of reflection in the law of reflection. This means that the angle at which light strikes a surface is always equal to the angle at which it reflects off that same surface.
Usually not.
No, it does not. But an angle and the angle opposite it are always equal.
The angle of incidence is always equal to the angle of reflection when light rays are reflected off a surface. This relationship is described by the law of reflection.
The angle of incidence is ALWAYS equal to the angle of reflection! This is one of the laws of reflection.
They are always equal.