
I have everything pretty much figured out everything but I need help proving the unique point formed by the three perpendiculars in the picture

I have everything pretty much figured out everything but I need help proving the unique point formed by the three perpendiculars in the picture
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Another way to prove that there is a point where all the perpendiculars meet:
The triangle is equilateral so a reflection over one of the perpendiculars will exchange two sides, and will also exchange the 2 other perpendiculars.
you can proof that 2 perpendiculars intersect
and because that points on the mirror line stay at the same point the 3 perpendiculars meet at one point.
The length of $|AB|$ is $\frac{1}{2} \ln(\frac{7 +3 \sqrt{5}}{2}) = 0.97.... $ but the proof is rather cumbersome. but the proof is rather cumbersome. (yep the Beltrami-Klein model)
In the hyperbolic plane all the "great triangles or ideal triangles" (whose angles are all zeros) are congruent. So if you can prove something in the case of one of them will be true for all of them.
Consider the Klein model and take a special great triangle: one of the great triangles that look equilateral in the Euclidean eye. The perpendicular (Euclidean) bisectors dropped from the vertices to the opposite sides will meet in the center of the Klein circle.
If a hyperbolic line goes through the Klein center and is perpendicular to another hyperbolic line in the Euclidean sense, will be perpendicular to that line in the hyperbolic sense as well.