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Transversal

A transversal is a line that intersects two or more lines, curves, or other segments at distinct points. In the plane, a single line that cuts across two lines is a transversal to those lines. The concept also generalizes to curves or segments that a line or curve meets.

When a transversal intersects two lines, several angle relationships arise. If the two lines are parallel, corresponding

Beyond simple planar geometry, the idea of a transversal extends to higher dimensions and different contexts.

Etymology: the term comes from the Latin transversus, meaning turned across or crossing. The concept remains

angles
formed
by
the
transversal
are
congruent,
and
alternate
interior
angles
are
also
congruent.
The
interior
angles
on
the
same
side
of
the
transversal
sum
to
180
degrees.
The
converse
holds
as
well:
if
a
transversal
creates
equal
corresponding
angles
or
equal
alternate
interior
angles
with
two
lines,
then
the
lines
are
parallel.
These
angle
relationships
are
fundamental
tools
in
Euclidean
geometry
for
proving
parallelism
and
solving
angle
problems.
A
transversal
to
a
family
of
curves
or
submanifolds
is
a
line
or
map
that
intersects
them
in
a
well-behaved
way,
and
transversality
is
a
central
concept
in
differential
topology
and
intersection
theory.
In
computational
geometry
and
related
fields,
transversals
describe
lines
or
curves
that
intersect
a
collection
of
objects,
and
they
are
used
in
optimization
and
visibility
problems.
a
fundamental
tool
for
understanding
how
a
line
interacts
with
a
set
of
geometric
figures.