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Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

Triangle Congruence Criteria: SAS and ASA

Deck 1 of 2 — Proving the Valid Criteria

In this deck:

  • Why checking all six parts is inefficient
  • How rigid motions prove SAS and ASA work
  • Why AAS also works (it reduces to ASA)
Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

Learning Objectives for This Deck

By the end of this deck, you should be able to:

  1. Explain why SAS — two sides and the included angle — is sufficient to guarantee triangle congruence using rigid motions
  2. Explain why ASA — two angles and the included side — is sufficient, using rigid motions and the ray-intersection argument
  3. Explain why AAS reduces to ASA via the angle sum property
  4. Use SAS and ASA as efficient shortcuts in geometric proofs
Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

From Six Parts to Fewer

You already know: two triangles are congruent ↔ all six pairs of corresponding parts match.

  • This is complete, but checking six parts is slow
  • In most proofs, you won't know all six parts
  • Question: Which combinations of three parts are enough?

Today we answer this for SAS and ASA.

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

Six Three-Part Combinations to Investigate

Table of all six three-part combinations

We'll prove three work — and show two fail.

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

Prove It or Find a Counterexample

For each combination, we either:

  1. Prove it works — show matching parts force a rigid motion to exist
  2. Disprove it — construct two non-congruent triangles with the same three parts

A criterion must work in ALL cases — one failure is enough to disqualify it.

We fill in our results as we go.

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

SAS Criterion: Two Sides, Included Angle

SAS Criterion: If two sides and the included angle of one triangle are congruent to two sides and the included angle of another, then the triangles are congruent.

  • Included angle: the angle between the two given sides
  • Formally: if , , , then

Two triangles with SAS parts highlighted

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

SAS Proof — Step 1: Translate

Given: , ,

Step 1: Translate so that maps to .

  • Translation is a rigid motion → distances and angles preserved
  • After translation: , and ,

The triangle is now positioned with one vertex at .

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

SAS Proof — Step 2: Rotate

Step 2: Rotate about so that ray aligns with ray .

  • Since , the point lands on
  • Now: and

We've matched two vertices. Where does land?

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

SAS Key Moment: Angle and Side Pin C''

After translate and rotate: angle locks direction of ray DC'', side locks position of C''

The included angle forces to a unique location — which must be .

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

SAS Proof Complete: Triangle ABC Maps to DEF

Result: , so the composition of translation and rotation maps .

  • No reflection was needed
  • SAS conditions completely determined the position of
  • Therefore:

Why the included angle is essential: it "aims" ray in the correct direction. Without it, could end up anywhere on a circle — that's SSA, which fails.

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

Quick Check — SAS vs. SSA

In each triangle below, are the marked parts SAS or SSA?

  • Triangle 1: sides of length 5 and 7, with the angle between them equal to 40°
  • Triangle 2: sides of length 5 and 7, with the angle opposite the side of length 7 equal to 40°

Which guarantees congruence? Why?

Think before advancing.

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

SAS vs. SSA: Included Angle Is Essential

Triangle 1: SAS ✓ — angle is the included angle between the two sides

Triangle 2: SSA ✗ — angle is not between the two sides

  • In SAS, the included angle locks the direction of the second side
  • In SSA, the non-included angle leaves free to be in two positions
  • The order of letters matters: S-A-S means the angle is between the S's

⚠️ Watch out: SSA is sometimes called the "ambiguous case" — it may or may not give a unique triangle. Never use SSA to conclude congruence.

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

ASA Criterion: Two Angles, Included Side

ASA Criterion: If two angles and the included side of one triangle are congruent to two angles and the included side of another, then the triangles are congruent.

  • Included side: the side between the two given angles
  • Formally: if , , , then

Two triangles with ASA parts highlighted

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

ASA Proof — Steps 1 and 2

Given: , ,

Step 1: Translate so that maps to . Now .

Step 2: Rotate about so that ray aligns with ray .

  • Since , the point lands on
  • Now ,

Same opening as SAS — now the angle conditions are different.

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

ASA Key Moment — Two Rays, One Intersection

Two rays from D and E aimed by equal angles, intersecting at unique point F

Two angles aim two rays. The rays intersect at exactly one point — which must be .

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

ASA Proof Complete: Both Rays Intersect at F

Result: (intersection of the two angle-aimed rays)

  • , , — all three vertices matched
  • No reflection needed
  • Therefore:

Key insight: Two angles from both endpoints of the known side aim two rays. Their intersection is unique — one point, one triangle.

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

Quick Check — Identify the Criterion

Two triangles share these measurements:

  1. Which criterion applies — SAS or ASA?
  2. What is angle ? What is angle ?
  3. Why is forced?

Think through each question before advancing.

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

ASA Answer: Ray Intersection Forces Third Vertex

Criterion: ASA

  • Two angles at the endpoints of the known side
  • and
  • After matching and : ray from aimed at , ray from aimed at

Intersection is unique → triangles are congruent

⚠️ Note: We didn't need to know the lengths , , , or — ASA forces them to match.

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

Why AAS Also Works: Angle Sum Rescues It

AAS Criterion: Two angles and a non-included side

  • If , , (side opposite angle , not between the two angles)

AAS reduces to ASA:

  1. Two angles are given: and
  2. The third angles are forced:
  3. Now we have , , — this is ASA on side with angles at and
Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

AAS vs. SSA — Why the Difference Matters

Pattern Why it works/fails
AAS: , , Third angle forced → becomes ASA ✓
SSA: , , Third side not forced → two positions ✗

The angle sum property rescues AAS. Nothing rescues SSA.

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

Quick Check — AAS or Not?

Determine whether each situation gives enough information for congruence:

  • Situation A: , , (side between the angles)
  • Situation B: , , (side opposite )
  • Situation C: , , (two sides and angle at their common vertex)

Identify each as ASA, AAS, SAS, or SSA.

Think before advancing.

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

ASA, AAS, SAS: All Three Situations Confirmed

Situation Pattern Congruence?
A: two angles, side between them ASA
B: two angles, non-included side AAS → ASA ✓ (third angle forced)
C: two sides, angle at their vertex SAS

⚠️ Reminder: For Situation C to be SAS, angle must be between sides and . If the angle were at or instead, it would be SSA — which does not work.

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

Summary — SAS and ASA Proven

SAS: Included angle aims ray, side length sets distance → pinned to

ASA: Two angles aim two rays from endpoints of known side → rays intersect at

AAS: Two angles force the third via angle sum → reduces to ASA

⚠️ Watch out: The angle must be between the two sides for SAS. Non-included angle = SSA = ambiguous case (fails).

⚠️ Watch out: AAS works (angle sum rescues it). SSA does not (no "side sum" property).

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8
Triangle Congruence Criteria | Deck 1 of 2: SAS and ASA

Next: Deck 2 — SSS and What Fails

Deck 2 covers:

  • Proving SSS — three sides force the third vertex via two circle intersections
  • Showing SSA fails — the non-included angle leaves two positions for
  • Showing AAA fails — angles alone say nothing about size
  • The complete summary table of all six criteria

Deck 2 completes the investigation and closes the criteria table.

Grade 9 Geometry | HSG.CO.B.8