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Right Triangle Trig question. Please respond with a legitimate answer and with a thorough explanation.

Right Triangle Trig question. Please respond with a legitimate answer and with a thorough-example-1
Right Triangle Trig question. Please respond with a legitimate answer and with a thorough-example-1
Right Triangle Trig question. Please respond with a legitimate answer and with a thorough-example-2
User Leonho
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4.7k points

1 Answer

3 votes
I can think of three ways. I'll try them all.

This is the construction for the geometric mean of
a and
b, so
EG=√(ab). That's no fun, but I suppose it's nice to know the answer going in.

We have three similar triangles, because the two little ones have a common angle and a right angle, so same angles as the big one.


(a)/(DE) = (EG)/(EF) = (DE)/(a+b)


(EG)/(DE) = (b)/(EF) = (EF)/(a+b)

So


EF^2 = b(a+b)


DE^2 = a(a+b)


EG = (b \ DE)/(EF)


EG^2 = (b^2 DE^2)/(EF^2) = (ab^2(a+b))/(b(a+b))=ab

There it is again.

I guess the way they really want you to do it is to write the Pythagorean Theorem a few times. Let's abbreviate
d=ED, f=EF, g=EG


g^2 + a^2 = d^2


g^2 + b^2 = f^2


d^2 + f^2 = (a+b)^2


g is our unknown. Adding all three equations,


g^2 + a^2 + g^2 + b^2+ d^2 + f^2= d^2 + f^2 + a^2 + b^2 + 2ab


2g^2=2ab


g^2=ab

That's three different ways. Plugging in the numbers,


√(2(16))=4√(2) \approx 5.657 \quad fourth choice.

I hate it when they ruin a nice exact answer with an approximation.


User GDanger
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4.8k points
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