If it has an hypotenuse then it is a right angle triangle and if you know its angles then use trigonometry to find its other two sides.
a^2 + b^2 = c^2 c= hypotenuse a and b are the legs (sides) of the triangle
An isosceles right triangle will always have its shorter sides of the same length, and the hypotenuse will always be this length times sin(45o) or times the square root of 0.5.
Adjacent means next to. So you're asking what sides of a triangle are next to the right angle of a triangle. That would be the 2 shorter sides of the triangle or 'legs' of the triangle. The hypotenuse (which is the longest side of the triangle) is directly across from the right angle.
No. For a right angle triangle, the sum of the squares of the shorter sides equals the square of the longer side (the hypotenuse): 22 + 62 = 40 72 = 49
square the length of the 2 shorter sides, add them together, take the square root and you have the hypotenuse
a^2 + b^2 = c^2 c= hypotenuse a and b are the legs (sides) of the triangle
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.
An isosceles right triangle will always have its shorter sides of the same length, and the hypotenuse will always be this length times sin(45o) or times the square root of 0.5.
If a right triangle has sides of 16Cm and 12Cm, the hypotenuse is: 20 cm
Adjacent means next to. So you're asking what sides of a triangle are next to the right angle of a triangle. That would be the 2 shorter sides of the triangle or 'legs' of the triangle. The hypotenuse (which is the longest side of the triangle) is directly across from the right angle.
The hypotenuse of any right triangle is longer than either one of the other two sides of the same right triangle. But it's shorter than their sum.
No. For a right angle triangle, the sum of the squares of the shorter sides equals the square of the longer side (the hypotenuse): 22 + 62 = 40 72 = 49
The length of a hypotenuse with the right triangle sides of 15 and 36 is: 39
square the length of the 2 shorter sides, add them together, take the square root and you have the hypotenuse
The Babylonians and Ancient Egyptians but it is tradionally given to Pythagoras that for a right angle triangle a2+b2 = c2 whereas a and b are the sides of the triangle with c being its hypotenuse or longest side
The hypotenuse of a right triangle is the side opposite the right angle. It is the longest of the three sides in the triangle.
If the two adjacent sides of a triangle are 3' and 4', the hypotenuse is: 5'