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Pythagorean theorem with a unknown leg

Pythagorean theorem with a unknown leg-example-1
User AustinTX
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2 Answers

12 votes
12 votes
c^2= 64+36
c^2= 100
C= sqrt(100) or 10

Hope this is helpful
User Joel Balmer
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13 votes
13 votes

Answer:


√(100), which equals 10.

Explanation:

We already have the length of 2 legs: 6 and 8. We can say that 6 is a and 8 is b and substitute that on the expression given in the problem (the blue text). This expression is the "Pythagorean theorem".

1. Substitute the values.


a^(2) +b^(2) =c^(2) \\\\(6)^(2) +(8)^(2) =c^(2)

2. Reorganize (it's just for aesthetics).


c^(2)=(6)^(2) +(8)^(2)

3. Calculate and simplify.


c^(2)=36 +64\\\\c^(2)=100\\\\\sqrt{c^(2)} =√(100)

See that taking the square root of a square number is basically keeping the number neutral, therefore, you can just type c alone.


c=√(100)\\\\c=10

Therefore, the length of side c is
√(100) which equals 10.

User Rubberchicken
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