Grade 9 Mathematics Unit 6 : Regular polygons
Grade 9 Mathematics · Unit 6 · Chapter 6.2 · QuickNotes

Sum of Exterior Angles of a Convex Polygon

These QuickNotes give you the most important points to remember for the ESSLCE. They are based on the MoE Grade 9 Mathematics Textbook, Unit 6, Chapter 6.2.

~5 min read
Summary
  • An exterior angle is formed outside the polygon by one side and the extension of the side next to it.
  • At each vertex, the interior angle and the exterior angle add up to 180°.
  • The sum of the exterior angles of any convex polygon, one at each vertex, is always 360°.
  • This sum does not depend on the number of sides.

Key Words

  • Exterior angle: an angle outside a convex polygon formed by one of its sides and the extension of an adjacent side.
  • Adjacent side: the side next to the one you are working with. The two sides share a vertex.
  • Extension of a side: the line you get when you continue a side straight past its vertex.
  • Straight angle: an angle of exactly 180°, the angle of a straight line.

What Is an Exterior Angle?

  • Take any side of a convex polygon and continue it straight past the vertex. The angle between this extension and the next side is an exterior angle.
  • The exterior angle sits outside the polygon, right next to the interior angle at the same vertex.
  • Together, the interior angle and the exterior angle make a straight line. This means interior angle + exterior angle = 180° at every vertex.
  • Be careful: not every angle drawn outside a polygon is an exterior angle. The angle must be formed by one side and the extension of the side next to it.
  • Each vertex of a polygon has one exterior angle on each side of it, but when we add exterior angles we count only one per vertex.
interior angle exterior angle B extended side side adjacent side interior + exterior = 180°

The Sum Is Always 360°

  • Here is the key result of this chapter: for any convex polygon, the exterior angles, one at each vertex, always add up to 360°.
  • The proof is short. At each of the n vertices, the interior and exterior angles make a straight line, so all the pairs together make n × 180°.
  • The interior angles alone add up to (n − 2) × 180°, which equals n × 180° − 360°.
  • Subtract: the exterior angles add up to n × 180° − (n × 180° − 360°) = 360°.
  • Notice that n cancels out completely. A triangle, a hexagon and a 100-gon all have the same exterior angle sum of 360°.

Worked example: show that the exterior angles of a triangle add up to 360°.

A triangle has 3 vertices, and each interior-exterior pair makes 180°, so all pairs together make 3 × 180° = 540°.

The interior angles of a triangle add up to 180°.

So the exterior angles add up to 540° − 180° = 360°.

Worked example: two interior angles of a triangle are 60° and 40°. Find the exterior angle at each vertex.

First find the third interior angle: x + 60° + 40° = 180°, so x = 80°.

Each exterior angle is 180° minus the interior angle at that vertex.

The exterior angles are 180° − 60° = 120°, 180° − 40° = 140° and 180° − 80° = 100°.

Check the sum: 120° + 140° + 100° = 360°. The rule works.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Computing the exterior angle as 360° − x instead of 180° − x, where x is the interior angle. The interior and exterior angles lie on a straight line, so they add up to 180°, not 360°.
  • Thinking the exterior angle sum grows when the polygon gets more sides. The interior sum grows, but the exterior sum stays fixed at 360°.
  • Treating any angle outside the polygon as an exterior angle. The angle between two extended sides, for example, does not count because it is not formed by a side and the extension of its adjacent side.
  • Counting two exterior angles at the same vertex when adding. The 360° rule uses exactly one exterior angle per vertex.

Easy Ways to Remember

  • Imagine walking around the edge of a polygon-shaped field. At each corner you turn through the exterior angle, and when you arrive back at the start you have made one full turn of 360°.
  • Interior sums change with n, but the exterior sum is always 360°. One full circle covers every polygon.
  • At every vertex, think “straight line”: interior + exterior = 180°.
  • To find an exterior angle quickly, subtract the interior angle from 180°.

Quiz

Tap an answer to check it.

1. What is the sum of the exterior angles of a convex hexagon, one at each vertex?

2. At one vertex of a convex polygon, the interior angle is 120°. What is the exterior angle at that vertex?

3. The exterior angles of a pentagon are (n + 5)°, (2n + 3)°, (3n + 2)°, (4n + 1)° and (5n + 4)°. What is the value of n?

4. The interior angles of a triangle are 50°, 60° and 70°. What are its exterior angles?

5. Which one of the following statements is correct for every convex polygon?

Remember: The exterior angles of any convex polygon add up to 360°, one at each vertex, no matter how many sides the polygon has. At every vertex, the interior and exterior angles make a straight line: they add up to 180°.