On curved surfaces, triangle angles do not sum to 180°: on positively curved surfaces like spheres, angles exceed 180° (e.g., 270° with three right angles), while on negatively curved surfaces like saddles, angles fall below 180°. The Gauss-Bonnet theorem explains this: angular excess equals Gaussian curvature times area. Since Einstein showed mass curves spacetime, no physical triangle in our universe truly sums to exactly 180°.
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Triangle Angles DON'T Sum to 180° on Curved SurfacesAdded:
A triangle on a flat surface always has angles summing to 180°.
One of the first rules of geometry, but what if the surface is not flat? Take a sphere. Start at the North Pole, walk straight down to the equator, turn 90°, walk a quarter of the way around, turn 90° again, walk straight back to the pole. Three right angles. 90 + 90 + 90 = 270°.
That extra 90° is called the angular excess. On a saddle-shaped surface, the opposite happens. The angles squeeze inward and the sum falls below 180. The Gauss-Bonnet theorem captures this perfectly. The angular excess equals the Gaussian curvature times the area. Zero curvature, 180° exactly. Positive curvature, more. Negative curvature, less. And here's the punchline. Einstein showed that mass curves spacetime itself. So, in our universe, no triangle truly sums to exactly 180°.
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