7.07 inches.
Without a type of triangle and the associated angle measurements, an answer is impossible.
A right angled triangle cannot have one angle of 32 degrees and another of 52 degrees. The two MUST sum to 90 degrees. Furthermore, information about the three angles is not sufficient to calculate any length for the triangle. You must know the length of at least one line - a side, an altitude or a median.
-- Like every triangle, a right triangle has three interior angles.-- Unlike any other triangle, one of the angles in a right triangle is a right angle.The other two are both acute angles.-- One acute angle is the angle whose cosine is length of one leg / length of hypotenuse-- Other acute angle is the angle whose sine is length of the same leg / length of the hypotenuse-- The length of the hypotenuse is the square root of [ (length of one leg)2 + length of other leg)2 ]
It's not possible to have a right angle triangle with sides of equal length. The sides on a right angle triangle are always in the ratio 3:4:5.
7.07 inches.
The sine function is used in trigonometric calculations when attempting to find missing side lengths of a right triangle. The sine of an angle in a triangle is equal to the length of the side opposite of that angle divided by the length of the hypotenuse of the triangle. Using this fact you can calculate the length of the hypotenuse if you know an angle measure and the length of one leg of the triangle. You can also calculate the length of a leg of the triangle if you know an angle measure and the length of the hypotenuse.
If the lengths of the two sides of a right triangle on either side of the 90 degree angle are 150 inches and 200 inches, the length of the hypotenuse is: 250 inches.
It is a right angle triangle.
Without a type of triangle and the associated angle measurements, an answer is impossible.
To find the diagonal length of a rectangle use Pythagoras' theorem for a right angle triangle.
A right angle because it complies with Pythagoras' theorem.
It depends on what other information you have. Knowing the lengths of two sides of a triangle is not enough to calculate the third. You need to have some further information: and angle, the area, the length of an altitude or a median.
The sine of an angle of a right triangle - which is a triangle containing one 90o angle - is calculated as the length of the side opposite the angle divided by the length of the hypotenuse. For very small values of x, sin(x) is approximately equal to x.
If it's a right angle triangle then:- a2+b2 = c2 where 'c' is the hypotenuse and the square root of this is the length of the hypotenuse when 'a' and 'b' are the other sides of the right angle triangle.
If you're only given the base, then you can't calculate the other leg. If you have any one of the following, then you can calculate all of the parts of the triangle: -- length of the other leg -- length of the hypotenuse -- size of either acute angle
For any right triangle, the equation to calculate the hypotenuse is a2 + b2 = c2. With a and bbeing the lengths of either leg adjacent (right next too or touching) to the right angle and c being the hypotenuse. This is known as the Pythagorean Theorem.