Geometry, Special Right Triangles

mbwngnpryr

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Feb 16, 2011
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I have two problems I can't figure out. One is a 45-45-90 triangle with a hypotenuse of 8, so that 8= n root 2. The other is a 30-60-90 triangle with the longer side length being 8 -- so that 8=n root 3. I know the ratios for the special triangles, but can't figure out how to solve for the sides of these two triangles.
 
You just did. What do you mean "solve"? Is there a particular problem statemetn that troubles you?

RBGTHGANH
 
I need to find the length of the other two sides -- n and 2n, and I don't know how to take 8=n root 3 and translate it to n and 2n. It should be an algebraic solution, but I can't figure it out -- I am not very good with radicals.
 
mbwngnpryr said:
I am not very good with radicals.

Never say that again. Practice, instead.


I have two problems I can't figure out. One is a 45-45-90 triangle with a hypotenuse of 8, so that 8= n root 2. The other is a 30-60-90 triangle with the longer side length being 8 -- so that 8=n root 3. I know the ratios for the special triangles, but can't figure out how to solve for the sides of these two triangles.

45-45-90 right triangles are ALWAYS \(\displaystyle Hypotenuse = \sqrt{2}\cdot (Side)\). This translatees nicely to \(\displaystyle \frac{Hypotenuse}{\sqrt{2}}\;=\;Side\)

How are you struggling with that? \(\displaystyle Side = \frac{8}{\sqrt{2}}\) Done! Does there need to be more?
 
Okay, that makes sense for the 45-45-90 triangle, I think; I need to look at it a little more, because I am still trying to learn what a radical solution should look like.

For the 30-60-90 triangle, would the shorter side, which is n, then be 8 divided by root 3? Making the hypotenuse 2 times (8 divided by root 3)? And is that as far as I can take the solution with the radicals, or is there a further step?
 
mbwngnpryr said:
For the 30-60-90 triangle, would the shorter side, which is n, then be 8 divided by root 3? Making the hypotenuse 2 times (8 divided by root 3)? And is that as far as I can take the solution with the radicals, or is there a further step?
Correct. No further step. Hypotenuse = 16 / sqrt(3)
Why are you not sure?
 
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