You are shown a diagram of a right angled triangle, with the hypotenuse labelled c and the other sides labelled a and b. If a is 7m long and c is 10m long, what is the length of b?

A simple implementation of Pythagoras' Theorem a2+b2=h2, and as in the question c is the hypotenuse, a2+b2=c2. (Side Note - in exams, the question may not specify which length is the hypotenuse - this is always the longest length of the triangle!)

 To get the length b, the formula must be rearranged so that we have something of the form 'b=...'. In order to do this, we must subtract 'a2' from the left hand side (LHS) of the equation, but to preserve the equality (the equals sign) a2 must be subtracted from the right hand side (RHS) too. This gives b2=c2-a2. Finally, both sides must be square rooted, so we have b=(c2-a2)1/2 (Side Note - something to the power of a half is the same as square rooting it!). Putting in the numbers, we are left with 7.141m. (Remember - UNITS!)

Answered by William H. Maths tutor

2836 Views

See similar Maths GCSE tutors

Related Maths GCSE answers

All answers ▸

Solve the two simultaneous equations X2 +2Y2= 18 and X - Y = 3


A price is decreased by 27% The new price is £1138.80 Work out the original price.


How to convert worded problems to solvable inequalities.


Solve the inequality x^2 – x < 6


We're here to help

contact us iconContact usWhatsapp logoMessage us on Whatsapptelephone icon+44 (0) 203 773 6020
Facebook logoInstagram logoLinkedIn logo

© MyTutorWeb Ltd 2013–2024

Terms & Conditions|Privacy Policy