How can you use angle measures to tell whether two lines are parallel

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When two lines intersect they form two pairs of opposite angles, A + C and B + D. Another word for opposite angles are vertical angles.

How can you use angle measures to tell whether two lines are parallel

Vertical angles are always congruent, which means that they are equal.

Adjacent angles are angles that come out of the same vertex. Adjacent angles share a common ray and do not overlap.

How can you use angle measures to tell whether two lines are parallel

The size of the angle xzy in the picture above is the sum of the angles A and B.

Two angles are said to be complementary when the sum of the two angles is 90°.

How can you use angle measures to tell whether two lines are parallel

Two angles are said to be supplementary when the sum of the two angles is 180°.

How can you use angle measures to tell whether two lines are parallel

If we have two parallel lines and have a third line that crosses them as in the ficture below - the crossing line is called a transversal

When a transversal intersects with two parallel lines eight angles are produced.

How can you use angle measures to tell whether two lines are parallel

The eight angles will together form four pairs of corresponding angles. Angles 1 and 5 constitutes one of the pairs. Corresponding angles are congruent. All angles that have the same position with regards to the parallel lines and the transversal are corresponding pairs e.g. 3 + 7, 4 + 8 and 2 + 6.

Angles that are in the area between the parallel lines like angle 2 and 8 above are called interior angles whereas the angles that are on the outside of the two parallel lines like 1 and 6 are called exterior angles.

Angles that are on the opposite sides of the transversal are called alternate angles e.g. 1 + 8.

All angles that are either exterior angles, interior angles, alternate angles or corresponding angles are all congruent.

Example

How can you use angle measures to tell whether two lines are parallel

The picture above shows two parallel lines with a transversal. The angle 6 is 65°. Is there any other angle that also measures 65°?

6 and 8 are vertical angles and are thus congruent which means angle 8 is also 65°.

6 and 2 are corresponding angles and are thus congruent which means angle 2 is 65°.

6 and 4 are alternate exterior angles and thus congruent which means angle 4 is 65°.

Video lesson

Find the measure of all the angles in the figure

How can you prove two lines are actually parallel? As with all things in geometry, wiser, older geometricians have trod this ground before you and have shown the way. By using a transversal, we create eight angles which will help us.

What Makes Lines Parallel?

Two lines are parallel if they never meet and are always the same distance apart. Both lines must be coplanar (in the same plane). To use geometric shorthand, we write the symbol for parallel lines as two tiny parallel lines, like this: ∥. For example, to say line JI is parallel to line NX, we write:

JI ∥ NX

How can you use angle measures to tell whether two lines are parallel

What are Parallel Lines in Real Life?

If you have ever stood on unused railroad tracks and wondered why they seem to meet at a point far away, you have experienced parallel lines (and perspective!). If the two rails met, the train could not move forward. Other parallel lines are all around you:

  • Street markings
  • Crosswalks
  • Bookshelves
  • Notebook paper

Parallel Lines Cut By A Transversal

A line cutting across another line is a transversal. When cutting across parallel lines, the transversal creates eight angles. Create a transversal using any existing pair of parallel lines, by using a straightedge to draw a transversal across the two lines, like this:

How can you use angle measures to tell whether two lines are parallel

Proving Lines are Parallel

Those eight angles can be sorted out into pairs. Let's label the angles, using letters we have not used already:

Angles In Parallel Lines

These eight angles in parallel lines are:

  1. Corresponding angles
  2. Alternate interior angles
  3. Alternate exterior angles
  4. Supplementary angles

Every one of these has a postulate or theorem that can be used to prove the two lines MA and ZE are parallel. Let's go over each of them.

Corresponding Angles

The Corresponding Angles Postulate states that parallel lines cut by a transversal yield congruent corresponding angles. We want the converse of that, or the same idea the other way around:

If a transversal cuts across two lines to form two congruent, corresponding angles, then the two lines are parallel.

To know if we have two corresponding angles that are congruent, we need to know what corresponding angles are. In our drawing, transversal OH sliced through lines MA and ZE, leaving behind eight angles. Each slicing created an intersection.

If one angle at one intersection is the same as another angle in the same position in the other intersection, then the two lines must be parallel. Two angles are corresponding if they are in matching positions in both intersections.

How can you use angle measures to tell whether two lines are parallel

In our drawing, the corresponding angles are:

∠B and ∠G

∠C and ∠J

∠F and ∠L

∠D and ∠K

If you check only a single pair of corresponding angles and they are equal, then the two lines are parallel.

Alternate Angles

Alternate angles as a group subdivide into alternate interior angles and alternate exterior angles. Exterior angles lie outside the open space between the two lines suspected to be parallel. Interior angles lie within that open space between the two questioned lines.

In our drawing, ∠B, ∠C, ∠K and ∠L are exterior angles. Can you identify the four interior angles?

Did you say ∠D, ∠F, ∠G and ∠J?

Alternate angles appear on either side of the transversal. They cannot by definition be on the same side of the transversal. In our drawing, ∠B is an alternate exterior angle with ∠L. ∠D is an alternate interior angle with ∠J. Can you find another pair of alternate exterior angles and another pair of alternate interior angles?

Here are both pairs of alternate exterior angles:

∠B and ∠L

∠C and ∠K

Here are both pairs of alternate interior angles:

∠D and ∠J

∠F and ∠G

Alternate Exterior Angles

If just one of our two pairs of alternate exterior angles are equal, then the two lines are parallel, because of the Alternate Exterior Angle Converse Theorem, which says:

How can you use angle measures to tell whether two lines are parallel

If two lines are cut by a transversal and the alternate exterior angles are equal, then the two lines are parallel.

Angles can be equal or congruent; you can replace the word "equal" in both theorems with "congruent" without affecting the theorem.

So if ∠B and ∠L are equal (or congruent), the lines are parallel. You could also only check ∠C and ∠K; if they are congruent, the lines are parallel. You need only check one pair!

Alternate Interior Angles

Just like the exterior angles, the four interior angles have a theorem and converse of the theorem. We are interested in the Alternate Interior Angle Converse Theorem:

How can you use angle measures to tell whether two lines are parallel

If two lines are cut by a transversal and the alternate interior angles are equal (or congruent), then the two lines are parallel.

So, in our drawing, if ∠D is congruent to ∠J, lines MA and ZE are parallel. Or, if ∠F is equal to ∠G, the lines are parallel. Again, you need only check one pair of alternate interior angles!

Supplementary Angles

Supplementary angles add to 180°. Supplementary angles create straight lines, so when the transversal cuts across a line, it leaves four supplementary angles.

How can you use angle measures to tell whether two lines are parallel

When a transversal cuts across lines suspected of being parallel, you might think it only creates eight supplementary angles, because you doubled the number of lines.

Not true! It creates more than eight!

In our main drawing, can you find all 12 supplementary angles?

Around the top intersection:

  1. ∠B and ∠C
  2. ∠C  and  ∠F
  3. ∠F  and  ∠D
  4. ∠D  and  ∠B

Around the bottom intersection:

  1. ∠G  and  ∠J
  2. ∠J  and  ∠L
  3. ∠L  and  ∠K
  4. ∠K  and  ∠G

Those should have been obvious, but did you catch these four other supplementary angles?

  1. ∠B  and  ∠K
  2. ∠L  and  ∠C
  3. ∠F  and  ∠J
  4. ∠D  and  ∠G

These four pairs are supplementary because the transversal creates identical intersections for both lines (only if the lines are parallel). The last two supplementary angles are interior angle pairs, called consecutive interior angles.

Consecutive Interior Angle Converse Theorem

How can you use angle measures to tell whether two lines are parallel

If two lines are cut by a transversal and the consecutive interior angles are supplementary, then the two lines are parallel.

As you may suspect, if a converse Theorem exists for consecutive interior angles, it must also exist for consecutive exterior angles.

Consecutive Exterior Angle Converse Theorem

How can you use angle measures to tell whether two lines are parallel

If two lines are cut by a transversal and the consecutive exterior angles are supplementary, then the two lines are parallel.

Consecutive exterior angles have to be on the same side of the transversal, and on the outside of the parallel lines. So, in our drawing, only these consecutive exterior angles are supplementary:

∠B and ∠K

∠L and ∠C

Keep in mind you do not need to check every one of these 12 supplementary angles. Just checking any one of them proves the two lines are parallel!

Lesson Summary

After careful study, you have now learned how to identify and know parallel lines, find examples of them in real life, construct a transversal, and state the several kinds of angles created when a transversal crosses parallel lines.

Those angles are corresponding angles, alternate interior angles, alternate exterior angles, and supplementary angles. Using those angles, you have learned many ways to prove that two lines are parallel.

Next Lesson:

How to Construct Parallel Lines