they are all the same length
In a right triangle, all the angle measurements together add up to be 180 degrees. And since it is a right triangle, one of the three angles is 90 degrees so if you are given one of the angles other than the right angle's measurements, you can find the angle measurements. Here's an example: There is a right triangle. One angle measures to be 45 degrees. What is the missing angle measure? Well we know that one angle must be 90 degrees and the other (as we were told) is 45 degrees. 90+45=135 and we know that a right triangle=180 degrees total and 180-135= 45. The missing angle is equal to 45 degrees! hope this makes sense and it helped.
No
No, you do not need to know the length of all the sides of one triangle to find a missing length of a similar triangle. If you know at least one pair of corresponding sides from both triangles, you can use the proportionality of the sides in similar triangles to find the missing length. The ratio of the lengths of corresponding sides remains constant, allowing you to set up a proportion to solve for the unknown length.
That really depends what else you know about the triangle. For example, if you only know the lengths of two sides, you simply don't have enough information.
As far as I can tell, it is missing and nobody here seems to know anything about it!
In a right triangle, all the angle measurements together add up to be 180 degrees. And since it is a right triangle, one of the three angles is 90 degrees so if you are given one of the angles other than the right angle's measurements, you can find the angle measurements. Here's an example: There is a right triangle. One angle measures to be 45 degrees. What is the missing angle measure? Well we know that one angle must be 90 degrees and the other (as we were told) is 45 degrees. 90+45=135 and we know that a right triangle=180 degrees total and 180-135= 45. The missing angle is equal to 45 degrees! hope this makes sense and it helped.
No
No, you do not need to know the length of all the sides of one triangle to find a missing length of a similar triangle. If you know at least one pair of corresponding sides from both triangles, you can use the proportionality of the sides in similar triangles to find the missing length. The ratio of the lengths of corresponding sides remains constant, allowing you to set up a proportion to solve for the unknown length.
That really depends what else you know about the triangle. For example, if you only know the lengths of two sides, you simply don't have enough information.
Surely you know how to find the third side of a right triangle, when you know the lengths of the other two. Find it, and then add up the lengths of the three sides to get the perimeter.
As far as I can tell, it is missing and nobody here seems to know anything about it!
The idea is that you model a situation with similar triangles and then use proportions to find the missing measurement indirectly.
180-x-y (x and y are the sides you already know) there are 180 degrees in a triangle. The remaining # is the last angle
lots of people have gone missing in the bumuda triangle and people dont know why so stay away from it i say.
No, because there are infinitely many combinations of base and height which will lead to that result.
One way to find a missing side length of a triangle is to use the Pythagorean theorem, which states that in a right triangle, the square of the length of the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the squares of the lengths of the other two sides (a² + b² = c²). If you know the lengths of two sides, you can rearrange the formula to solve for the missing side. For example, if you have the lengths of the two legs (a and b), you can find the hypotenuse (c) by calculating c = √(a² + b²).
you must know more information. Like the lengths of 2 sides. Then using Trig (law of sines or law of cosines) you can find the remaining sides and angles.