We know that a right triangle is a triangle having a right angle, where the side opposite the right angle is the hypotenuse, and the perpendicular sides are the legs of the right triangle.
The Pythagorean theorem gives the relationship between the lengths of the sides of a right triangles.
In the case where you know only the measure lengths of the sides of a triangle, you need to test these measures. If one of the sides of the triangle has a square measure equal to the sum of the square measures of two other sides, then this side is called the hypotenuse and opposite to this side is a 90 degree angle, which is a right angle. So, you can say that this triangle is a right triangle.
Pythagorean triple are very helpful to determine a right triangle, such as:
(3, 4, 5), (5,12,13), (8, 15, 17), (7, 24, 25), and (20, 21, 29).
If the lengths of the sides of the triangle can be substituted for 'a', 'b', and 'c'in the equationa2 + b2 = c2and maintain the equality, then the lengths of the sides are a Pythagorean triple, and the triangle is a right one.
The Pythagorean theorem, which is the square root of the sum of the squares of two sides of a right triangle is equal to the hypotenuse, can be used to find the distance between two points. This means that it can also be used to find the equation of a line.
You use the pythagorean theorem.
The pythagorean theorem is a+b=c. So, a+b equals two of the three sides. Using your knowledge of what those two sides are will help you with figuring out the third side, but technically, the pythagorean theorem is used only for right triangles. a and b are the two straight sides and c is the diagonal side. your welcome. 8th grader
you can't, because the Pythagorean theorem is for right triangles and the triangles formed by the diagonal of a parallelogram are not right triangles.
Pythagoras' theorem states that for any right angle triangle the square of its hypotenuse is equal to the sum of its squared sides as in the following formula:- a squared + b squared = c squared whereas a and b are the sides of the triangle with c being its hypotenuse
If the lengths of the sides of the triangle can be substituted for 'a', 'b', and 'c'in the equationa2 + b2 = c2and maintain the equality, then the lengths of the sides are a Pythagorean triple, and the triangle is a right one.
If you know two sides of a right triangle, the Pythagorean Formula lets you find the third side. Also, if you know all three sides of a triangle, you can confirm whether it is, or isn't, a right triangle.
The Pythagorean theorem, which is the square root of the sum of the squares of two sides of a right triangle is equal to the hypotenuse, can be used to find the distance between two points. This means that it can also be used to find the equation of a line.
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Yes simply with a protractor and a measuring device.
The hypotenuse is the longest side in a right triangle and it is opposite the right angle. It is always opposite the right angle and is found by using the Pythagorean theorem.
The purpose of the Pythagorean theorem in mathematics is to calculate the length of the sides of a right-angled triangle. It helps in finding the unknown side lengths by using the relationship between the squares of the triangle's sides.
You can calculate this using the Pythagorean formula for a right triangle.
Yes. Using Pythagorean's theorem: 202+212 = 400+441 = 841 = 292 = 841
Yes they do for a triangle using Pythagorean theorem 5 squared + 12 squared = 13 squared
Because the 2 shorter sides are 6 and 8 in, and it is an right triangle, this is automatically a Pythagorean Triple. This is a 6-8-10 triangle, thus, the hypotenuse is 10 in.Elsewise, you can find the answer using the plain Pythagorean Theroem:62 + 82 = x236 + 64 = x2100 = x210 = x