This MCQ module is based on: SAS, ASA, AAS and RHS Conditions
SAS, ASA, AAS and RHS Conditions
This mathematics assessment will be based on: SAS, ASA, AAS and RHS Conditions
Targeting Class 7 level in General Mathematics, with Basic difficulty.
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Measuring the Angles (AAA Does Not Guarantee Congruence)
Instead of measuring the three sidelengths of the triangular frame, if Meera and Rabia measure the three angles, can they recreate the triangle exactly?
As we see, we can draw many triangles with these measurements that are not congruent — they have the same shape but different sizes. Hence, two triangles that have the same set of angles need not be congruent.
Measuring Two Sides and the Included Angle — SAS Condition
To check this, we need to see if there can exist non-congruent triangles with the given measurements. These measurements correspond to the case of two sides and the included angle.
The construction should make it clear that all triangles with these measurements must be congruent to each other. Thus, when two sides and the included angle? of two triangles are equal, the two triangles are congruent.
Measuring Two Sides and a Non-Included Angle — SSA
Can there exist non-congruent triangles having these measurements? Let us construct and find out.
Construction Steps:
- Step 1: Draw the base PQ of length 6 cm.
- Step 2: Draw a line \(l\) from P that makes an angle of 30° with PQ.
- Step 3: Draw a sufficiently long arc from Q of radius 4 cm cutting the line \(l\).
Hence, we can draw two non-congruent triangles with the given measurements. This is called the SSA (Side Side Angle) condition. We have seen that SSA does not guarantee congruence.
Two Angles and the Included Side — ASA Condition
We have seen how to construct a triangle when we are given two angles and the included side. This construction should make it clear that all the triangles having these measurements must be congruent to each other.
Example: Midpoint and Parallel Lines
We have:
- AO = OD (as O is the midpoint of AD)
- BO = OC (as O is the midpoint of BC)
- \(\angle AOB = \angle DOC\) (vertically opposite angles)
We see that the SAS condition (two sides and the included angle) is satisfied, and so we can conclude that the triangles are congruent: \(\triangle AOB \cong \triangle DOC\).
AB and DC are corresponding sides when the triangles are superimposed. Thus, their lengths are equal: AB = DC.
Figure it Out (ASA & SAS)
AB = XY = 7 cm ✓
BC = YZ = 5 cm ✓
\(\angle B = \angle Y = 47°\) (included angle between the two sides) ✓
By the SAS condition, \(\triangle ABC \cong \triangle XYZ\).
\(\angle ABD = \angle CDB\) (alternate interior angles, transversal BD) ✓
\(\angle ADB = \angle CBD\) (alternate interior angles, transversal BD) ✓
BD = BD (common side) ✓
By ASA condition: \(\triangle ABD \cong \triangle CDB\).
This also means AD = CB (CPCT).
\(\angle ABC = \angle DBC\) (given) ✓
BC = BC (common side) ✓
\(\angle ACB = \angle DCB\) (given) ✓
By ASA condition: \(\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DBC\).
By CPCT: \(\angle BAC = \angle BDC\).
\(\angle ACB = \angle DBC\) (given) ✓
BC = BC (common) ✓
\(\angle ABC = \angle DCB\) — we need to check this. Given \(\angle ABD = \angle DCA\) and \(\angle ACB = \angle DBC\), we can deduce the remaining angles using the angle sum property.
By ASA (if conditions match) or AAS: the triangles are congruent, giving us AB = DC and AC = DB (CPCT).
Measuring Two Angles and a Non-Included Side — AAS Condition
What are the measures of \(\angle B\) and \(\angle Y\)?
We know that the sum of the angles of a triangle is 180°.
\(\angle B = 180° - 35° - 75° = 70°\), and similarly \(\angle Y = 70°\).
Thus, we have \(\angle B = \angle Y\).
These two triangles now satisfy the ASA condition with \(\angle B = \angle Y = 70°\), BC = YZ = 4 cm, and \(\angle C = \angle Z = 75°\). So \(\triangle ABC \cong \triangle XYZ\).
In Fig 1.2, the equalities are between two angles and the non-included side of the two triangles. This condition is referred to as the AAS (Angle Angle Side)? condition.
Measuring Two Sides in a Right Triangle — RHS Condition
Looking at a rough diagram helps in planning the construction.
Construction Steps:
- Step 1: Draw the base QR of length 4 cm.
- Step 2: Draw a line \(l\) perpendicular to QR from Q.
- Step 3: From R, cut an arc on line \(l\) of radius 5 cm.
- Step 4: Let P be the point at which the arc intersects the line \(l\). Join PR.
The other triangle we get below is also congruent to \(\triangle PQR\). Why? Because all triangles having these measurements will be congruent to each other.
Thus, we conclude that \(\triangle ABC \cong \triangle XYZ\).
Conditions that Guarantee Congruence
From the discussions so far, we can see that two triangles are congruent if any of the following conditions are satisfied:
- Draw \(\triangle ABC\) with AB = 5 cm, \(\angle A = 40°\), AC = 7 cm (SAS data).
- Ask a classmate to draw a triangle with the same SAS data. Compare the triangles.
- Now draw \(\triangle PQR\) with PQ = 5 cm, \(\angle P = 40°\), \(\angle Q = 60°\) (ASA data).
- Draw \(\triangle XYZ\) with \(\angle X = 40°\), \(\angle Z = 80°\), YZ = 5 cm (AAS — note the side is opposite to \(\angle X\)).
- Compare: Are \(\triangle PQR\) and \(\triangle XYZ\) congruent? (Hint: find the third angle!)
Observe: The SAS triangles are congruent (same shape and size). For the ASA vs AAS comparison: In \(\triangle PQR\), \(\angle R = 180° - 40° - 60° = 80°\). In \(\triangle XYZ\), \(\angle Y = 180° - 40° - 80° = 60°\). Both triangles have angles 40°, 60°, 80° and a side of 5 cm between specific angles — they are congruent!
Explain: Knowing any two angles automatically determines the third (angle sum = 180°). This is why AAS always reduces to ASA — if you know two angles and any side, you effectively know all three angles and can apply ASA. The key difference from AAA is that knowing a side fixes the size, not just the shape.
Competency-Based Questions
Step 1: Check if the triangle has a right angle.
— If YES: Measure hypotenuse + one side → RHS (2 measurements + right angle check = 3 checks total)
— If NO: Go to Step 2
Step 2: Choose one of these (each needs exactly 3 measurements):
✅ Measure all 3 sides → SSS
✅ Measure 2 sides + included angle → SAS
✅ Measure 2 angles + included side → ASA
Minimum: Always 3 measurements are needed. Less than 3 is never sufficient (2 sides alone, 2 angles alone, or 1 side + 1 angle are all insufficient).
Assertion–Reason Questions
Reason (R): The AAS condition guarantees congruence because knowing two angles determines the third.
Reason (R): The SSA condition guarantees congruence.
Reason (R): The RHS condition guarantees congruence for right triangles when the hypotenuse and one side are known.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the SAS congruence condition?
The SAS (Side-Angle-Side) condition states that two triangles are congruent if two sides and the included angle of one triangle are equal to the corresponding two sides and included angle of the other. The angle must be between the two known sides. NCERT Class 7 Part II Chapter 1 explains SAS with examples.
What is the difference between ASA and AAS?
In ASA (Angle-Side-Angle), the known side is between the two known angles. In AAS (Angle-Angle-Side), the known side is not between the two known angles. Both prove congruence, but the elements are positioned differently. NCERT Class 7 Ganita Prakash Part II Chapter 1 distinguishes these clearly.
When do you use the RHS congruence condition?
The RHS (Right angle-Hypotenuse-Side) condition applies only to right-angled triangles. If the hypotenuse and one other side of one right triangle equal those of another right triangle, the triangles are congruent. You need exactly: a right angle, the hypotenuse and one other side to be equal.
Why does SSA not work as a congruence condition?
SSA (Side-Side-Angle) does not guarantee congruence because with two sides and a non-included angle, you can sometimes construct two different triangles. This is called the ambiguous case. NCERT Class 7 Maths explains why only SSS, SAS, ASA, AAS and RHS are valid criteria.
How do you choose which congruence condition to use?
Examine what information is given: if three sides are known, use SSS. If two sides and their included angle are known, use SAS. If two angles and a side are known, use ASA or AAS depending on the side position. For right triangles with hypotenuse and a side known, use RHS.
Frequently Asked Questions — Chapter 1
What is SAS, ASA, AAS and RHS Conditions in NCERT Class 7 Mathematics?
SAS, ASA, AAS and RHS Conditions is a key concept covered in NCERT Class 7 Mathematics, Chapter 1: Chapter 1. This lesson builds the student's foundation in the chapter by explaining the core ideas with worked examples, definitions, and step-by-step methods aligned to the CBSE curriculum.
How do I solve problems on SAS, ASA, AAS and RHS Conditions step by step?
To solve problems on SAS, ASA, AAS and RHS Conditions, follow the NCERT method: identify the given quantities, choose the relevant formula or theorem, substitute values carefully, and simplify. Class 7 exercises gradually increase in difficulty — start with solved NCERT examples before attempting exercise questions, and always verify your answer by substitution or diagram.
What are the most important formulas for Chapter 1: Chapter 1?
The essential formulas of Chapter 1 (Chapter 1) are listed in the chapter summary and highlighted throughout the lesson in formula boxes. Memorise them and practise at least 2–3 problems per formula. CBSE board exams frequently test direct application as well as combined use of multiple formulas from this chapter.
Is SAS, ASA, AAS and RHS Conditions important for the Class 7 board exam?
SAS, ASA, AAS and RHS Conditions is part of the NCERT Class 7 Mathematics syllabus and appears in CBSE board exams. Questions typically include short-answer, long-answer, and competency-based items. Review the NCERT examples, exercise questions, and previous-year board problems on this topic to prepare confidently.
What mistakes should students avoid in SAS, ASA, AAS and RHS Conditions?
Common mistakes in SAS, ASA, AAS and RHS Conditions include skipping steps, misapplying formulas, sign errors, and losing track of units. Write each step clearly, double-check algebraic manipulations, and re-read the question after solving to verify that your answer matches what was asked.
Where can I find more NCERT practice questions on SAS, ASA, AAS and RHS Conditions?
End-of-chapter NCERT exercises for SAS, ASA, AAS and RHS Conditions cover all difficulty levels tested in CBSE exams. After completing them, try the examples again without looking at the solutions, attempt the NCERT Exemplar questions for Chapter 1, and solve at least one previous-year board paper to consolidate your understanding.