The numbers 3, 4, and 5 work:
32 + 42 = 52
9 + 16 = 25
You cannot. If you are dividing any square into equal sized squares, then the number of these smaller squares must be a square number.
Not unless at least one of the numbers is zero.
Impossible, as there are not enough numbers to cover all squares.
To divide 4 squares, each into 4 smaller squares, you can simply draw a grid within each square. By dividing each original square into 4 equal parts, you can achieve this by drawing one horizontal line and one vertical line through the center of each square. This results in 16 smaller squares total, with each of the original 4 squares now containing 4 smaller squares.
The one in which the square of the biggest one is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two is.
You cannot. If you are dividing any square into equal sized squares, then the number of these smaller squares must be a square number.
Not unless at least one of the numbers is zero.
Impossible, as there are not enough numbers to cover all squares.
To divide 4 squares, each into 4 smaller squares, you can simply draw a grid within each square. By dividing each original square into 4 equal parts, you can achieve this by drawing one horizontal line and one vertical line through the center of each square. This results in 16 smaller squares total, with each of the original 4 squares now containing 4 smaller squares.
To create four squares of equal size from five squares, draw two lines: one vertical and one horizontal. Position the vertical line to divide the central square into two equal halves, and place the horizontal line to intersect the same square, also splitting it into two equal rectangles. This will result in the formation of four smaller squares of equal size.
The one in which the square of the biggest one is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two is.
The square root of any non-square number is always irrational, so there is no way to use numbers (other than square roots, surds and squares) to show it precisely.
There are no two square numbers that add up to 65. The perfect squares less than 65 are 0, 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, and 64. The combinations of these squares do not yield a sum of 65.
Any 3 given numbers representing the sides of a triangle that do not comply with Pythagoras' theorem for a right angle triangle are not valid.
Of the numbers in that list, the perfect squares are 4 (equal to ±22), 9 (equal to ±32), 16 (equal to ±42) and 25 (equal to ±52).
To divide a square into 8 equal parts, you can start by cutting it into 4 smaller squares by drawing one vertical and one horizontal line through the center. Then, take each of those smaller squares and divide them in half either vertically or horizontally, resulting in a total of 8 equal rectangles or squares. Alternatively, you could also create 8 triangular sections by drawing lines from each corner to the center of the square.
First you would square the length of each of the sides. You'd add the squares of the smaller two numbers. If they are smaller than the square of the biggest side, then the triangle is obtuse. If their sum is bigger, then the triangle is acute. If they are equal, then the triangle is a right triangle.Example:length of sides-23, 34, 49232+342__492529+1156__24011685