The answer should be 67. 5 degrees. The adjacent angle equals the hypotenuse divided by two. After calculation the answer should be approximately 68 degrees.
All triangles have 180 degrees, therefor an acute triangle has 180 degrees.
No. An acute triangle only has angles less than 90 degrees. A triangle with a 130 degree angle is obtuse.
HA Congruence Theorem says: If the hypotenuse and an acute angle of one right triangle are congruent to the hypotenuse and an acute angle of another right triangle, then the two right triangles are congruent.
Yes, but a triangle is acute only if all three of its angles are acute (< 90o).An isosceles triangle can be an acute triangle, but it doesn't have to be.An acute triangle can be an isosceles triangle, but it doesn't have to be.That depends on the sizes of its angle because an isosceles triangle has 2 equal sides and 2 equal angles which could be 70 degrees, 70 degrees and 40 degrees which are all acute angles that add up to 180 degrees.
No, an acute triangle must have all 3 angles under 90 degrees. A triangle can have an acute angle and still be a right triangle or an obtuse triangle.
A triangle with an hypotenuse has a right angle that measures 90 degrees and two other acute angles,
There are three sides, hypotenuse, opposite and adjacent. But the adjacent and opposite are not fixed sides: it depends on which of the two acute angles you are examining.For either of the non-right angles, the adjacent side is the one which forms the angle, along with the hypotenuse. For the given angle θ, the length of the adjacent side compared to the hypotenuse (adjacent/hypotenuse) is the cosine (cos θ).
For a right angle triangle its hypotenuse is opposite its angle of 90 degrees and its other two angles are acute and its 3 angles add up to 180 degrees.
The measure of the smaller acute angle of the triangle is: 17.46 degrees.
Because if you construct a right triangle in which the acute angles are 30° and 60°, you'll find that the side adjacent to the 60° angle is 1/2 the length of the hypotenuse, which is how you apply the definition of the cosine.
Angles are acute, not sides.
The hypotenuse angle theorem, also known as the HA theorem, states that 'if the hypotenuse and an acute angle of one right triangle are congruent to the hypotenuse and an acute angle of another right triangle, then the two triangles are congruent.'
A triangle can have 3 acute angles that add up to 180 degrees
The hypotenuse only is not sufficient to determine the area of a right triangle, unless the triangle is stated to be isosceles, or there is some other information that allows determination of the length of a side in addition to the hypotenuse. The area of a right triangle with a given hypotenuse only approaches zero as one of the two acute angles approaches zero degrees.
All triangles have 180 degrees, therefor an acute triangle has 180 degrees.
If the hypotenuse and an acute angle of a right triangle are congruent to the correspondingparts of another right triangle, then the triangles are congruent.
If the triangle is less than 90 degrees, it is an acute triangle