Grade 9 Mathematics Unit 6 : Regular polygons
Grade 9 Mathematics · Unit 6 · Chapter 6.4 · QuickNotes

Properties of Regular Polygons: Pentagon, Hexagon, Octagon and Decagon

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 6.4.

~8 min read
Summary
  • An n-sided regular polygon has n lines of symmetry.
  • Every regular polygon has a circumcircle through all its vertices and an incircle that touches all its sides. The radius of the incircle is the apothem.
  • The central angle of an n-sided regular polygon is 360° ÷ n.
  • For radius r: side s = 2r sin(180°/n), apothem a = r cos(180°/n), perimeter P = ns, and area A = (1/2)aP.

Key Words

  • Line of symmetry: a line that divides a figure into two halves that match exactly, like a mirror.
  • Center of a regular polygon: the point inside the polygon where all its lines of symmetry meet.
  • Circumcircle: the circle that passes through all the vertices of the polygon. Its radius r runs from the center to a vertex.
  • Incircle: the circle inside the polygon that touches each side at its midpoint.
  • Apothem (a): the perpendicular segment from the center to a side. It is also the radius of the incircle.
  • Central angle: the angle at the center between two radii drawn to consecutive vertices.
  • Inscribed polygon: a polygon whose vertices all lie on a circle. The polygon is inscribed in the circle, and the circle is circumscribed about the polygon.

Lines of Symmetry

  • A figure is symmetric when one half is the exact mirror image of the other half. The folding line is called a line of symmetry.
  • All regular polygons are symmetric, and the rule is simple: an n-sided regular polygon has exactly n lines of symmetry.
  • An equilateral triangle has 3 lines, a square has 4, a regular pentagon has 5, and a regular hexagon has 6.
  • When n is odd, each line of symmetry runs from a vertex to the midpoint of the opposite side.
  • When n is even, half the lines join opposite vertices and the other half join the midpoints of opposite sides.
  • All the lines of symmetry cross at one point inside the polygon. That point is the center of the polygon.
Square: 4 lines even n: vertex to vertex and side to side Pentagon: 5 lines odd n: vertex to opposite side

The Circumcircle and the Incircle

  • For every regular polygon, you can draw a circle through all its vertices. This outer circle is the circumcircle, and its radius r goes from the center to any vertex.
  • You can also draw a smaller circle inside the polygon that touches each side at its midpoint. This inner circle is the incircle.
  • The radius of the incircle is the apothem of the polygon. It is the perpendicular distance from the center to a side.
  • We say the polygon is inscribed in the circumcircle, and the incircle is inscribed in the polygon.
  • Not every polygon has both circles, but every regular polygon does. This is one of the special properties that makes regular polygons useful.

The Central Angle

  • Draw radii from the center to two consecutive vertices. The angle between them at the center is a central angle.
  • The n radii cut the polygon into n identical isosceles triangles, and the angles around the center add up to 360°.
  • So the measure of each central angle of an n-sided regular polygon is 360° ÷ n.
  • Notice that this is the same number as each exterior angle from Chapter 6.3. For a pentagon both are 72°, and for an octagon both are 45°.
O r 60° a A B circumcircle incircle r reaches a vertex, the apothem a reaches the middle of a side

Worked example: find the central angle of a regular polygon with 5 sides and with 8 sides.

For n = 5, the central angle is 360° ÷ 5 = 72°.

For n = 8, the central angle is 360° ÷ 8 = 45°.

Side, Apothem, Perimeter and Area

  • Each of the n isosceles triangles has two sides equal to the radius r, and the apothem cuts its central angle in half. Half of 360°/n is 180°/n.
  • Trigonometry in that half triangle gives the four formulas of Theorem 6.1, listed below for an n-sided regular polygon inscribed in a circle of radius r.
  • Side: s = 2r sin(180°/n). This means half a side is r sin(180°/n).
  • Apothem: a = r cos(180°/n). The apothem is always a little shorter than the radius.
  • Perimeter: P = ns = 2nr sin(180°/n). The perimeter is just n copies of the side.
  • Area: A = (1/2)aP. Each triangle has area (1/2)sa, and there are n of them, so A = (1/2)a × ns = (1/2)aP.

The hexagon shortcut: in a regular hexagon the central angle is 60°, so each of the 6 triangles is equilateral. This gives s = r, P = 6r, a = (√3/2)r, and A = (3√3/2)r2. Since the side equals the radius, you can also write the area as A = (3√3/2)s2.

Worked example: find the side of a square inscribed in a circle of radius 5 cm.

Use s = 2r sin(180°/n) with r = 5 and n = 4.

s = 2 × 5 × sin(45°) = 10 × 1/√2 = 5√2 cm.

Worked example: find the apothem of a regular pentagon inscribed in a circle of radius 6 cm.

Use a = r cos(180°/n) with r = 6 and n = 5.

a = 6 × cos(36°) ≈ 6 × 0.8090 ≈ 4.854 cm.

Worked example: find the area of a regular nonagon inscribed in a circle of radius 10 cm.

Combine the formulas: A = (1/2)aP = nr2 cos(180°/n) sin(180°/n).

With n = 9 and r = 10: A = 9 × 100 × cos(20°) × sin(20°).

Using the table values cos(20°) ≈ 0.9397 and sin(20°) ≈ 0.3420, we get A ≈ 289.24 cm2.

The Four Polygons of This Chapter

Regular polygon Sides (n) Lines of symmetry Central angle Each interior angle
Pentagon 5 5 72° 108°
Hexagon 6 6 60° 120°
Octagon 8 8 45° 135°
Decagon 10 10 36° 144°

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Mixing up the radius and the apothem. The radius reaches a vertex, while the apothem reaches the midpoint of a side. The apothem is always shorter than the radius.
  • Using 360°/n in the side and apothem formulas. The formulas use the half angle 180°/n, because the apothem cuts the central angle in half.
  • Confusing the central angle with the interior angle. The central angle sits at the center and equals 360° ÷ n. The interior angle sits at a vertex and equals (n − 2) × 180° ÷ n.
  • Treating s = r as a general rule. The side equals the radius only for the regular hexagon, because only there the central triangles are equilateral.
  • Forgetting the 1/2 in the area formula A = (1/2)aP.

Easy Ways to Remember

  • Think “r to the corner, a to the side”: the radius touches a vertex and the apothem touches the middle of a side.
  • Three angles share one value: the central angle and the exterior angle of a regular polygon are both 360° ÷ n.
  • The pair sin and s go together: the side uses sine, and the apothem uses cosine.
  • One area formula rules them all: A = (1/2)aP works for every regular polygon, from the triangle to the decagon.
  • Symmetry is free information: n sides always means n lines of symmetry.

Quiz

Tap an answer to check it.

1. How many lines of symmetry does a regular octagon have?

2. What is the measure of each central angle of a 10-sided regular polygon?

3. The central angle of a regular polygon measures 12°. How many sides does the polygon have?

4. Each side of a regular hexagon is 10 units long. What is the area of this hexagon?

5. A square is inscribed in a circle of radius 4 cm. What is the length of each side of the square?

Remember: An n-sided regular polygon has n lines of symmetry, a circumcircle of radius r through its vertices, an incircle of radius a touching its sides, and a central angle of 360° ÷ n. Its measurements come from four formulas: s = 2r sin(180°/n), a = r cos(180°/n), P = ns, and A = (1/2)aP.