In a right triangle, one leg has length , the other leg has length , and the hypotenuse has length . What is the value of ?
Table of contents
- 0. Review of College Algebra4h 43m
- 1. Measuring Angles40m
- 2. Trigonometric Functions on Right Triangles2h 5m
- 3. Unit Circle1h 19m
- 4. Graphing Trigonometric Functions1h 19m
- 5. Inverse Trigonometric Functions and Basic Trigonometric Equations1h 41m
- 6. Trigonometric Identities and More Equations2h 34m
- 7. Non-Right Triangles1h 38m
- 8. Vectors2h 25m
- 9. Polar Equations2h 5m
- 10. Parametric Equations1h 6m
- 11. Graphing Complex Numbers1h 7m
- OLD 1. Angles and the Trigonometric Functions Coming soon
- OLD 2. Trigonometric Functions graphs, Inverse Trigonometric Functions Coming soon
- OLD 3. Trigonometric Identities and Equations Coming soon
- OLD 4. Laws of Sines, Cosines and Vectors Coming soon
- OLD 5. Complex Numbers, Polar Coordinates and Parametric Equations Coming soon
- NEW (not used) 7. Laws of Sines, Cosines and Vectors Coming soon
- NEW (not used) 8. Vectors Coming soon
- NEW(not used) 9. Polar equations Coming soon
- NEW (not used) 11. Graphing Complex Numbers Coming soon
2. Trigonometric Functions on Right Triangles
Solving Right Triangles
Multiple Choice
In a right triangle, if one leg has length units, the other leg has length units, what is the length of the side opposite the right angle (the hypotenuse)?
A
units
B
units
C
units
D
units
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Verified step by step guidance1
Identify the given sides of the right triangle: one leg is 3 units and the other leg is 4 units.
Recall the Pythagorean theorem, which states that in a right triangle, the square of the hypotenuse (the side opposite the right angle) is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two legs. Mathematically, this is expressed as \(c^2 = a^2 + b^2\), where \(c\) is the hypotenuse and \(a\) and \(b\) are the legs.
Substitute the known leg lengths into the Pythagorean theorem: \(c^2 = 3^2 + 4^2\).
Calculate the squares of the legs: \$3^2 = 9\( and \)4^2 = 16\(, so \)c^2 = 9 + 16$.
Add the values to find \(c^2 = 25\), then take the square root of both sides to find \(c = \sqrt{25}\), which gives the length of the hypotenuse.
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