10.4k views
5 votes
Please help, this one had me upset all day!

Please help, this one had me upset all day!-example-1

2 Answers

4 votes
check the picture below.

let's do the red ones, to see if they check out.


\bf \textit{using the pythagorean theorem} \\\\ c^2=a^2+b^2\implies c=√(a^2+b^2) \qquad \begin{cases} c=hypotenuse\\ a=adjacent\\ b=opposite\\ \end{cases}\\\\ -------------------------------\\\\ √(24^2+69^2)~~~~\approx~~~~ 73.054774~~~~\\e 74 \\\\\\ √(8^2+15^2)~~~~=~~~~17\\e 19 \\\\\\ √(30^2+60^2)~~~~\approx~~~~67.08204\\e 68

and now, you can check any of the others, to see if the root of that sum is the last or longest side, namely the hypotenuse.
Please help, this one had me upset all day!-example-1
User Nikola Malovic
by
6.2k points
6 votes
7, 24, 25 makes one. 9, 40, 41 as well. 39, 52, 65 works. 11, 60, 61 does too. Lastly, 40, 42, 58 is a right triangle as well.

How I found out was plugging each into the Pythagorean Theorem for proving/solving right triangles of a² + b² = c². The last number in each combo is your C. The other two numbers are interchangeable in regards to position.
User RyanM
by
5.4k points