The hypotenuse is always the longest of the three sides of a right triangle.
Acute.
Yes they do. We find this by applying the pythagorean theorum. Since 9^2 + 12^2 = 15^2, they form a right triangle.
The perimeter of any triangle is the sum of its 3 sides
The hypotenuse of a right triangle with legs of 8 and 15 centimeters is the square root of (8 squared plus 15 squared), which is 17.
No
t(4) = 10 t(5) = 15 10 + 15 = 25
Use the formula for the area of a triangle, which is 0.5 x base x height. Since the 10' and the 15' are at right angles, you can take any of them to be the "base", in which case the other one is the "height".
The hypotenuse is always the longest of the three sides of a right triangle.
No. In order to be the sides of a right triangle, the square of one of the numbers must be the sum of the squares of the other two numbers. (the square of 9) + (the square of 10) = 181 but (the square of 15) = 225 .
By Pythagoras's theorem, to make a right angled triangle, 142 + 152 should be 212 But 142 + 152 = 196 + 225 = 421 whereas 212 = 441 So these three sides cannot make a right angled triangle.
The length of a hypotenuse with the right triangle sides of 15 and 36 is: 39
No. There can be no isosceles right angled triangle with all three sides being rational numbers.
Yes
A right triangle with a hypotenuse of length 15 and a leg of length 8 has an area of: 50.75 units2
No, it is not.
No