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Tilly2 | 09:21 Tue 21st Oct 2014 | Quizzes & Puzzles
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-29688355

The angle on the cube answer is really bugging me. I understand the isoceles triangle answer but if it's a cube made of squares, why isn't the angle two bisections ie, 90 degrees?
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60°
If you joined the two unconnected end of the red lines would you have an equilateral triangle?
no it has to be 60' because.....

if you join the two ends of the red lines so that if forms a triangle
then a moments reflection will reveal that the sides are equal ( all three equal and that means equilateral triangle ) and so the angle is 60'
each of the sides being the length of the diagonal
I knew the hole in an metal ring got bigger, tilly. ;o)
and before you tell me off, I didn't type AN above^.
The sides of the said triangle are all diagonals and are therefore root(2) times the unit length of the cube

and yes I had my Aha ! moment as described in the article
2 What should the question be? Anybody any ideas?
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I know it's 60 degrees . As I said, I do understand the answer.

But...is all the sides are squares, which they are, a diagonal line drawn from corner to corner would bisect thr right angle. Therefore, two bisections would add up to another right angle.
I know what you mean, till. ;) but don't know why that doesn't apply.
I knew that Svejk - it made sense....

the hole in the doughnut q came up regularly in Phys A Level in the sixties.

If you heat a cartwheel rimmy thing to fit over a wooden cartwheel (!) well it was 50 y ago, then the radius expands linearly ( as well as the circumference, since they are linearly related )

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Sandy, something like, 'If I asked ypur companion which road to take, what would he say?

Then take the other route.
The angle tills you describe goes up in the air ( makes a tent shape)
and the angle they want is between the two lines
if you did the same with 2 flat(side by side) squares, you'd have a 90d angle and 2 45's.
Question Author
Exactly, sweety.

The question asked would have to be, 'If I asked your companion if this was the right road ( pointing to one) what would he say?'

Then take the other road.
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Time to make a move. Thanks for trying to help.
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Equilateral triangle, I meant. Not isosceles.

Still don't get it. Time to blow the cobwebs out of my head.
The fact that the red lines bisect right angles is irrelevant. You're really looking at an isosceles triangle 'buried' in the cube.
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Sandy it's an equilateral triangle and the lines are on the surface. I realyy do understand 60° but still can't figure why it's not 90 °
It is an equilateral triangle. (don't know where I got isosceles from) and the red lines aren't on the same plain.

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