Today I worked on exercises in Analysis with an Introduction to Proof and did a little mathematical puttering.
I’m also ready today to start sharing my work on the proposition about the inscribed equilateral triangle. I’ll start by proving that a triangle is equilateral if and only if its three angles are equal.
First, recall from my post Revenge of the Squares, Part 1 that the angles opposite (i.e. subtended by) the equal sides of an isosceles triangle are also equal. The proof of the following related lemma is very similar.
Lemma: If two angles of a triangle are equal, then the sides that subtend them are also equal.


Consider the triangle $\triangle ABC$ with $\angle ACB\cong\angle ABC$.
Draw a line bisecting $\angle BAC$ and extend it to intersect $\overline{BC}$. Let the point of intersection be called $D$.
Now, by the angle-angle-side property, $\triangle ACD\cong\triangle ABD$, since $\angle ACB\cong\angle ABC$, $\angle CAD\cong\angle BAD$, and $\overline{AD}$ is shared.
Therefore, $AC=AB$. $\overline {AC}$ and $\overline {AB}$ are the sides that subtend the equal angles $\angle ACB$ and $\angle ABC$, so the lemma is proven.
(Note that I have added AAS to my list of triangle congruence properties to prove.1)
Proposition: A triangle is equilateral if and only if its three angles are equal.

Consider a triangle $\triangle ABC$.
Assume that $\triangle ABC$ is equilateral.
Then, since $AB=AC$, $\angle ACB\cong\angle ABC$, by the theorem cited above. Similarly, since $AC=BC$, $\angle ABC\cong\angle BAC$.
It follows that $\angle ACB\cong\angle ABC\cong\angle BAC$.
Thus, if $\triangle ABC$ is equilateral, then its three angles are equal.
Assume instead that the three angles of $\triangle ABC$ are equal.
Then, by the lemma, since $\angle ACB\cong\angle ABC$, $AB=AC$. Similarly, since $\angle ABC\cong\angle BAC$, $AC=BC$.
It follows that $AB=AC=BC$.
Thus, if the three angles of $\triangle ABC$ are equal, then it is equilateral.
This proves the equivalence.
Stay tuned tomorrow for some circle geometry.
- To do. ↩︎
what does an equal sign with a tilde on top denote?
Congruence.
that’s what happens when your adventurer’s lamp goes out, as I recall.
Heh.