The angle is a right angle.
Suspended account squared
That's only true if the "legs" are indeed legs, i.e. the triangle is a right triangle, and the legsinclude a 90-degree angle.
3a squared b squared
2
It is Pythagoras' theorem that states for any right angle triangle when its hypotenuse is squared it is equal to the sum of its squared sides.
A squared + B squared = C squared A & B are the two sides of a triangle next to a right angle. C is the third side across from the right angle (hypotenuse) It's Euclidean Geometry. Only works in a right angle triangle
If the right angle is at A then SA = 5 mm.
His theorem for a right angle triangle that states the hypotenuse of a right angle triangle when squared is equal to the sum of its squared sides.
It is the formula for Pythagoras' theorem for right angle triangles.
No because the measurements of a right angle triangle must comply with Pythagoras' theorem which is: a squared + b squared = c squared
Angle A + Angle B + Angle C = 180 degrees. If one angle equals 90 degrees then it is a right triangle and the lengths of the sides are in a ratio such that A squared plus B squared equals C squared (Pythagorean Theorem)
No because Pythagoras' theorem states that for any right angle triangle its hypotenuse when squared is equal to the sum of its squared sides.
If you mean: a squared+b squared = c squared then it is Pythagoras' theorem for a right angle triangle
The law of cosines with a right angle is just the pythagorean theorem. The cosine of 90 degrees is 0. That is why the hypotenuse squared is equal to the sum of both of the legs squared
That a right angle triangle's base when squared plus its height when squared is equal to its hypotenuse when squared:- a2+b2 = c2
For any right angle triangle its hypotenuse when squared is equal to the sum of its squared sides.