In a right triangle, square the lengths of the other two sides and add them together. The length of the hypotenuse will be the positive square root of that number.
If it's a right angle triangle then use Pythagoras' theorem.
Use Pythagoras' theorem...a2 + b2 = c2where c is the length of the hypotenuse in a right-angled triangle.
Using Pythagoras' theorem the hypotenuse is 13 units of measurement in length
It is Pythagoras' theorem
For the right angle triangle to comply with Pythagoras' theorem then c, which will be the hypotenuse, must be 10 units in length. Pythagoras' theorem: 82+62 = 100 and the square root of this is 10 which is the length of the hypotenuse.
Using Pythagoras' theorem the length of the hypotenuse is 37
It is Pythagoras' theorem.
Using Pythagoras' theorem the length of the hypotenuse is 13 units
Using Pythagoras' theorem the length of the hypotenuse is 17 units
If it's a right angle triangle then use Pythagoras' theorem.
Use Pythagoras' theorem: 42+42 = 32 and the square root of this is the length of the hypotenuse
Use Pythagoras' theorem...a2 + b2 = c2where c is the length of the hypotenuse in a right-angled triangle.
Using Pythagoras' theorem the hypotenuse is 13 units of measurement in length
It is Pythagoras' theorem
For the right angle triangle to comply with Pythagoras' theorem then c, which will be the hypotenuse, must be 10 units in length. Pythagoras' theorem: 82+62 = 100 and the square root of this is 10 which is the length of the hypotenuse.
It is a right angle triangle and by using Pythagoras' theorem the length of its hypotenuse is 10 feet.
Pythagoras' theorem states that for any right angled triangle the length of the hypotenuse when squared is equal to the sum of the length of the base plus the length of the height when both are squared: base2+height2 = hypotenuse2