168k views
4 votes
HELP PLEASE !!!!!!! Pythagorean theorem

HELP PLEASE !!!!!!! Pythagorean theorem-example-1
User Panosru
by
7.5k points

2 Answers

3 votes

We are missing one of the legs. Thus, we rearrange the original formula of the pythagorean theorem...


\boxed{A^2+B^2=C^2}
\boxed{A^2=C^2-B^2}

Let's solve it...


Plug\;in\;the\;given\;numbers\;to\;the\;formula...\\\\A^2=16^2-8^2\\\\Find\;what\;the\;squared\;numbers\;equal\\\\\left[\begin{array}{ccc}16^2(16*16)=256\\8^2(8*8)=64\end{array}\right]\\\\\\Now,\;since\;we\;are\;trying\;to\;find;\a\;missing\;leg\;we\;subtract\;256\;from\;64...\\\\\boxed{256-64=192}\\\\\\Then,\;we\;find\;the\;square\;root\;of\;192\;(√(x) )\\\\\boxed{√(192)=13.856 }\\\\\\Since\;we\;have\;a\;decimal\;we\;need\;to\;round\;it\;to\;the\;nearest\;tenths...\\\\\boxed{13.856=13.9}

User KABoissonneault
by
7.4k points
1 vote

Answer:


\large\boxed{x=8\sqrt3}

Explanation:

The Pythagorean theorem:


leg^2+leg^2=hypotenuse^2

We have:


leg=8, leg=x,\ hypotenuse=16

Substitute:


8^2+x^2=16^2


64+x^2=256 subtract 64 from both sides


x^2=192\to x=√(192)\\\\x=√((64)(3))\\\\x=√(64)\cdot\sqrt3\\\\x=8\sqrt3

User JuanDM
by
7.5k points