They are call Pythagorean triples as for example 3, 4 and 5
Fermat's triplets * * * * * No, wrong mathematician. They are Pythagorean triplets.
3 whole numbers that are the three sides of a right triangle. 3,4,5; 5,12,13
The Pythagorean Theorem is not a triangle. It's a statement that describes a relationship among the lengths of the sides in any right triangle.
Yes
They are Pythagorean triples
They are Pythagorean triples
If they are a Pythagorean triple then they will form a right angle triangle
They are call Pythagorean triples as for example 3, 4 and 5
a2 + b2 = c2 a = a leg of the triangle, b = the other leg of the triangle, and c = the hypotenuse
Fermat's triplets * * * * * No, wrong mathematician. They are Pythagorean triplets.
Pythagorean triple
A Pythagorean Triple is a set of three numbers that are related like this:(The square of one of them) = (the square of another one) + ( the square of the third one)If three numbers are related that way, then they can be the lengths of the sides ofa right triangle. If they're not, then they can't.They're called a "Pythagorean Triple" because the ancient Greek mathematician Pythagoraswas the one who wrote the famous formula that describes the relationship among thesides of every right triangle. That's his formula, up in the second line of this answer.
There is not enough information in the question to be sure what it is about. However, one possibility is that, since it is a Pythagorean triplet, it is a set of numbers such that a triangle with sides of thhose lengths will be right angled.
3 whole numbers that are the three sides of a right triangle. 3,4,5; 5,12,13
I can't say for sure, since you haven't given me any sets of numbers to choose from, but this question is designed to test your knowledge of the Pythagorean Theorem. Multiply the smaller two numbers by themselves and add them together. If their sum does not equal the square of the largest number, that group cannot be a right triangle.
The Pythagorean Theorem is not a triangle. It's a statement that describes a relationship among the lengths of the sides in any right triangle.