40 units, solved by using Pythagoras' theorem
Isosceles triangles have two sides which are the same length and two angles which are equal. So if your right triangle has one side of length 2 feet, which is not the hypotenuse, then the remaining side must also be 2 feet long. We know that the square of the length of the hypotenuse is equal to the squares of the other two sides. 2 squared is 4. So the squares of the two sides are 4 + 4 which equals 8. Now we just find the square root of 8, which is 2.8284... So the length of the hypotenuse is 2.83 Feet (to two decimal places). Or, In a right isosceles triangle, the two base angles equal 45°. Since the length leg is 2 ft, then the hypotenuse length would be equal to 2√2 or approximately to 2.83 ft. sin 45° = leg/hypotenuse hypotenuse = 2/sin 45° hypotenuse = 2/(√2/2) hypotenuse = 4/√2 hypotenuse = 4√2/2 hypotenuse = 2√2 °
I don't think there is enough information to answer the question, first of all, is it a right triangle? Second, is the the 13cm the hypotenuse. Assuming that 13cm is the hypotenuse, and the triangle is a right triangle, the equation would be 49+x^2=169
The hypotenuse has no intrinsic relationship to the circle. The hypotenuse is the side of a right triangle that is opposite to the right angle. You can draw a circle that has a hypotenuse as its diameter or its radius, but you can do that with any line segment. It would not be related in another way to the triangle.
I'm sorry, but I can not completely answer this question. The length varies from the size of the triangle. I would need a picture to answer this.
It is the longest side, directly across from the right angle. You can calculate it knowing a side and an angle (which gives you both non-right angles) or more typically by using the Pythagorean Theorem, which gives the formulaa2 + b2 = c2 where a and b are the sides and c the hypotenuse.Example : A right triangle with sides adjacent to the right angle of 3 and 4 has a hypotenuse length of 5, because 32 + 42 = 52.To Find The Hypotenuse LengthGiven the lengths of the other two sides, a and b, square each of them, add them together, and take the square root of the result.Example : a right triangle with the two sides of length 9 and 12.(9)2 + (12)2 = c2 (c is the hypotenuse length)81 + 144 = c2 therefore 225 = c2 and c = 15, the hypotenuseUsually you would use Pythagoras' Theorem: a2 + b2 = c2, where c is the hypothenuse.
The legs of a right triangle have the same length and the hypotenuse is 30 ft, each leg would be of length 21.21 ft.
The circumradius of a right angled triangle would be equal to half the length of its hypotenuse.
The longest length would be the hypotenuse. You can use SOHCAHTOA to find the length.
It would be the square root 32 in cm
The length of the hypothesis of a right triangle with legs of 4 would depend on the units used for measurement. If the legs are measured in the same units, the length of the hypotenuse can be found using the Pythagorean theorem, which states that the square of the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the squares of the legs. In this case, the length of the hypotenuse would be 4√2.
Yes. This side would be called the hypotenuse.
If it is a 45-45-90 triangle, then divide the hypotenuse by the square root of 2. If it is a 30-60-90 triangle, then the shorter leg would be the hypotenuse divided by 2. And the longer leg would be the the shorter leg multiplied by the square root of 3.
The length of the hypotenuse would be approximately 24.41 and the angle, theta, would be approximately 35.
H = sqrt (324 + 576) = sqrt 900 = 30 in
8*sqrt(2) The diagonal of the square would be the hypotenuse of the right triangle formed by two of the sides of the square.
If the lengths of the legs of a right triangle are 5 and 7,then the length of the hypotenuse issqrt( 52 + 72 ) = sqrt( 25 + 35 ) = sqrt( 60 ) = 7.746(rounded)Note:This only works with a right triangle.
The hypotenuse would be sqrt(9.26042 + 14.36452) = sqrt(86 + 206) = sqrt(292) = 17.0908