Triangles — Class 9 (CBSE)
The triangle is the strongest shape in nature. It's why every bridge has triangular trusses, every roof has rafters, every pyramid stands for 4,500 years. Mathematically, the triangle is the simplest polygon and the building block of all others. Master congruence in this chapter and you've mastered the language of plane geometry.
1. The story — three lines, three angles, and the universe
A surveyor in ancient Egypt could measure any field using only triangles — divide it into triangles, measure each, sum up. The Pythagoreans built their entire cosmology on right triangles. Modern engineers test bridge safety by checking each triangular truss.
Why triangles? Because:
- Three points always lie in a plane — no triangle wobbles in 3D.
- Three lines (sides) FIX the shape uniquely — you cannot deform a triangle without changing a side.
- They are the simplest closed figure — every polygon decomposes into triangles.
This chapter formalises the second point: when do we say two triangles are "the same" (congruent)? And what minimum information is enough to decide?
2. The big picture — five criteria and one theorem
You'll learn:
- Five congruence criteria (SSS, SAS, ASA, AAS, RHS) — five tests for "same triangle."
- Isosceles Triangle Theorem — equal sides ⇒ equal opposite angles (and converse).
- Triangle Inequality — the sum of any two sides exceeds the third.
- Side-Angle correspondence — bigger side ⇔ bigger opposite angle.
These tools answer 95% of all triangle problems in Class 9, 10 and JEE Foundation.
3. What is a triangle?
A triangle is a closed plane figure bounded by three straight line segments. Notation: with vertices , sides , and angles .
The side opposite to a vertex carries the lowercase of that vertex: side (opposite ), , .
Classification by sides
- Equilateral: all three sides equal.
- Isosceles: at least two sides equal.
- Scalene: no two sides equal.
Classification by angles
- Acute: all three angles < 90°.
- Right: one angle = 90°.
- Obtuse: one angle > 90°.
Every triangle fits into exactly one box from each classification. So we can speak of an acute isosceles triangle, a right scalene triangle, etc.
4. Congruent triangles — the formal definition
Two triangles are congruent if you can place one exactly on top of the other so that all corresponding parts overlap.
In other words, two triangles are congruent if their:
- Three sides correspond and are equal, AND
- Three angles correspond and are equal.
That's six pairs of equal parts. We write .
Important — order matters. means , , . So , , , , etc.
Mnemonic — CPCT. Corresponding Parts of Congruent Triangles are equal. You'll use this phrase in EVERY congruence proof.
5. Five congruence criteria
The miracle: you don't have to check all six pairs of parts. You only need to check three — IF they're the right three.
5.1 SSS — Side-Side-Side
If the three sides of one triangle are equal to the three sides of another, the triangles are congruent.
5.2 SAS — Side-Angle-Side
If two sides AND the included angle of one triangle equal those of another, the triangles are congruent.
Crucial — the angle must be BETWEEN the two sides. If the angle is not included, you can construct two different triangles — congruence fails. This is the famous "SSA → ambiguous case" warning.
5.3 ASA — Angle-Side-Angle
If two angles AND the included side of one triangle equal those of another, the triangles are congruent.
5.4 AAS — Angle-Angle-Side
If two angles AND a non-included side of one triangle equal those of another, the triangles are congruent.
(Why AAS works: knowing two angles fixes the third (angle sum = 180°), reducing it to ASA.)
5.5 RHS — Right-Hypotenuse-Side
If, in two RIGHT triangles, the hypotenuse AND one other side are equal, the triangles are congruent.
RHS is the ONE EXCEPTION to the "no SSA" rule — it works only because the included angle is forced to be 90°.
6. Why SSA is NOT a congruence criterion
Suppose , , and (a non-included angle). You can construct two different triangles satisfying these — one acute at , one obtuse. So SSA alone is not enough.
The only exception is RHS, where the included angle is fixed at 90°.
Exam tip. Whenever you cite a congruence criterion, write the three letters (SSS, SAS, etc.) clearly. Markers look for this.
7. Two classic proofs (model proofs to copy)
7.1 Isosceles Triangle Theorem
Theorem. In an isosceles triangle, the angles opposite the equal sides are equal. (Angles opposite equal sides are equal.)
Given. with . To prove. .
Proof. Draw the bisector of , meeting at .
In and :
- (given).
- (by construction).
- (common).
By SAS: .
Therefore by CPCT: . ∎
7.2 Converse: equal angles ⇒ equal opposite sides
Theorem. If two angles of a triangle are equal, the sides opposite them are equal.
Given. with . To prove. .
Proof. Draw the bisector of , meeting at .
In and :
- (given).
- (by construction).
- (common).
By AAS: .
Therefore by CPCT: . ∎
Together: in a triangle, two angles are equal ⇔ the opposite sides are equal. Iff.
8. Triangle Inequality
Theorem. In any triangle, the sum of any two sides is greater than the third side.
In symbols: , , .
Practical use. Given three lengths, can they form a triangle? Yes if and only if the longest length is less than the sum of the other two.
Worked example. Can 3, 4, 8 form a triangle? Check: . No. The triangle inequality fails.
9. Side-Angle correspondence in a triangle
Theorem. In any triangle, the larger angle is opposite the longer side. Equivalently, the longer side is opposite the larger angle.
So in , if , then (and vice-versa).
Worked example. In , . Order the sides.
.
10. Important properties of an equilateral triangle
- All three sides equal AND all three angles equal to .
- All three altitudes/medians/angle bisectors coincide.
- It's its own reflection — highly symmetric.
The equilateral is a special case of isosceles ( AND , which forces ).
11. Eight worked exam examples
Example 1 — Identify congruence rule (1 mark)
Two triangles have all three pairs of sides equal. Which congruence rule applies? SSS.
Example 2 — SAS (2 marks)
In and , , , . Are they congruent? Which rule? is included between and . So by SAS, .
Example 3 — ASA (2 marks)
and : , cm, . Congruent? Two angles + included side → ASA. Yes, .
Example 4 — RHS (2 marks)
Two right triangles have hypotenuse 13 cm each, and one leg 5 cm each. Congruent? Right angle, hypotenuse, one other side → RHS. Yes congruent.
Example 5 — Counterexample for SSA (3 marks)
Show by example that two triangles need not be congruent if two sides and a non-included angle are equal. Take with . Two different triangles can be drawn — one where is acute, one where is obtuse. Same but different triangles.
Example 6 — Isosceles (3 marks)
In , cm and . Find . By Isosceles Triangle Theorem, . Sum: .
Example 7 — Triangle inequality (2 marks)
Can a triangle have sides 7, 12, 6? Check: ✓, ✓, ✓. Yes, valid triangle.
Example 8 — HOTS proof (4 marks)
In , is the midpoint of and . Prove .
In and :
- (midpoint).
- (given).
- (common).
By SAS: . By CPCT: . ∎
This proves: the perpendicular bisector of from guarantees — useful for many later proofs.
12. Common pitfalls
- Wrong correspondence in notation. FIXES the matching: , etc. Don't rearrange the letters.
- Citing SSA as a criterion. It's NOT — except as RHS in right triangles.
- Forgetting "included" in SAS and ASA. The angle/side must be BETWEEN the two pairs.
- Using a triangle's properties without proving them first. "Equal sides → equal angles" needs the Isosceles theorem.
- Confusing CPCT with the criterion. First USE the criterion (SAS etc.) to establish congruence; THEN use CPCT to extract more equal parts.
- Triangle inequality applied wrong. It's STRICT (>): does NOT form a triangle (degenerate).
- Stopping after one congruence pair. Often you need to use one congruence to prove another. Read the question carefully.
13. Beyond NCERT — stretch problems
Stretch 1 — Olympiad
Prove that the bisector of the vertical angle of an isosceles triangle is the perpendicular bisector of the base.
Use the proof from Section 7.1; CPCT gives both (so is midpoint) and (which sum to 180° since they're linear pair → each is 90°).
Stretch 2 — Median property
Show that in any triangle, the medians (from each vertex to the midpoint of the opposite side) divide the triangle into 6 smaller triangles of equal area.
(Uses area considerations — beyond Class 9, but a beautiful result.)
Stretch 3 — JEE-style
The sides of a triangle are . Show that for any positive satisfying , , , a triangle exists with those sides.
(This is the converse of the Triangle Inequality. Construct using the SSS rule.)
14. Real-world triangles
- Bridges. Trusses use rigid triangular shapes — the only polygon you can't 'collapse' without bending a side.
- Roof framing. Rafters form triangles for structural stability.
- Satellite triangulation. GPS uses signal-distance from multiple satellites to triangulate position.
- Surveying / Cartography. Land area is found by dividing into triangles.
- Photography. The 'triangle of exposure' (aperture, shutter speed, ISO) is a conceptual triangle.
- Music notation. Music theory uses triangle-of-fifths/fourths to relate keys.
- Logos. The triangle is the most stable visual element (think the Adidas logo, the Triforce, the radiation symbol).
15. CBSE exam blueprint
| Type | Marks | Typical question | Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| VSA | 1 | Identify congruence rule; angle of isosceles | 30 sec |
| SA-I | 2 | Apply SSS/SAS/ASA/RHS; CPCT | 2 min |
| SA-II | 3 | Triangle inequality; side-angle correspondence; isosceles | 4–5 min |
| LA | 4 | Full proof using congruence + CPCT; multi-step | 6–8 min |
Total marks: 10–14 / 80 in Class 9 finals. High-yield chapter — combine with Lines and Angles (10+ marks) for ~20+ marks of pure geometry.
Three exam-day strategies:
- Always list the THREE pairs you're matching when applying a congruence criterion. State all three.
- Always cite CPCT when extracting an additional equality from congruent triangles.
- Mark all given equalities on your diagram (tick marks for equal sides, arc marks for equal angles). The diagram does the proof for you.
16. NCERT exercise walkthrough
- Exercise 7.1: 8 questions — SSS, SAS, ASA criteria; identify congruent triangles.
- Exercise 7.2: 8 questions — isosceles triangle theorem and its converse; multi-step CPCT proofs.
- Exercise 7.3: 5 questions — RHS criterion; problems on right triangles.
(The chapter has been streamlined in 2023+ NCERT — earlier inequality-heavy exercises have been moved to a separate chapter.)
17. 60-second recap
- Triangle = 3 sides + 3 angles. Sum of angles = 180°.
- Classification: by sides (eq/isos/scalene); by angles (acute/right/obtuse).
- Congruent triangles = same shape AND size; matching parts ().
- Five rules: SSS, SAS (included angle), ASA (included side), AAS, RHS.
- NOT a rule: SSA (ambiguous; only RHS exception).
- CPCT: Corresponding Parts of Congruent Triangles are equal.
- Isosceles theorem: equal sides ↔ equal opposite angles.
- Triangle Inequality: sum of any two sides > third.
- Side-Angle correspondence: bigger side ↔ bigger opposite angle.
Take the practice quiz and the flashcard deck. Next: Quadrilaterals.
