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Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

Pythagorean Theorem and Applications

Triangles — Right Triangle Side Lengths

In this lesson:

  • Apply to find missing sides
  • Recognize Pythagorean triples for speed
  • Use the converse to classify triangles
Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

What You Will Learn Today

After this lesson, you will be able to:

  1. Apply to find missing sides
  2. Identify the hypotenuse opposite the right angle
  3. Recognize common Pythagorean triples and multiples
  4. Use the converse to classify triangles
  5. Solve multi-step problems using the theorem
Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

What Is the Longest Side Here?

Right triangle with legs labeled 3 and 4, right angle marked, hypotenuse unlabeled with question mark

The side opposite the right angle is always the longest side.

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

The Pythagorean Theorem States This

Right triangle with sides labeled a, b, c showing a² + b² = c² with squares drawn on each side

where = hypotenuse, and = legs

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

Finding the Hypotenuse From Two Legs

Legs are 6 and 8. Find the hypotenuse.

Step 1: Plug into the formula

Step 2: Compute

Step 3: Take the square root

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

Finding a Leg From Hypotenuse

Hypotenuse is 13, one leg is 5. Find the other leg.

Step 1: Rearrange the formula

Step 2: Compute

Step 3: Take the square root

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

Quick Check on Irrational Results

Legs are 5 and 7. Find the hypotenuse.

The answer stays as — ACT choices often use simplified radicals.

Does make sense? It's between 8 and 9, reasonable for legs 5 and 7.

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

Always Identify the Hypotenuse First

Before computing, follow this process:

  1. Find the right angle in the diagram
  2. Mark the hypotenuse — opposite the right angle
  3. Label the legs — the two remaining sides
  4. Then plug in — hypotenuse is always

Given sides 15, 9, 12 — hypotenuse is 15 (largest).

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

Common Pythagorean Triples Save Time

Table showing four Pythagorean triples with example multiples

Triple Example Multiple
3-4-5 6-8-10, 9-12-15
5-12-13 10-24-26
8-15-17 16-30-34
7-24-25 14-48-50
Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

How to Recognize Triple Multiples Quickly

Sides 20 and 48 in a right triangle. Find the third.

Step 1: Find a common factor

Step 2: Recognize the triple: 5-12-13

Step 3: Scale back up:

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

The Converse Classifies Any Triangle

Let be the longest side. Compare to :

  • Right triangle
  • Acute triangle
  • Obtuse triangle

Memory aid: Sum bigger → a-cute. Sum smaller → ob-scenely big.

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

Converse Example With an Acute Triangle

Sides 7, 10, 12 — longest side is 12.

→ Sum is bigger, so the triangle is acute.

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

Converse Example With an Obtuse Triangle

Sides 5, 8, 11 — longest side is 11.

→ Sum is smaller, so the triangle is obtuse.

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

ACT Practice on Triangle Classification

Which set of side lengths forms a right triangle?

(A) 9, 12, 16
(B) 10, 24, 26
(C) 6, 7, 10
(D) 8, 14, 17

Check each — does equal ?

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

Answer to the Classification Problem

(B) 10, 24, 26 forms a right triangle.

Shortcut: is multiplied by 2.

The others: (A) , (C) , (D)

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

Rectangle Diagonal Uses Hidden Right Triangles

Rectangle with dimensions 36 by 48 and diagonal drawn, forming two right triangles

A TV screen is 36 in × 48 in. Find the diagonal.

Recognize: is in

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

Coordinate Distance Is the Theorem

Find the distance from to .

Horizontal leg:

Vertical leg:

The distance formula is just the Pythagorean theorem on a grid.

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

Ladder Against a Wall Problem

A 17-foot ladder leans against a wall, base 8 feet away. How high does it reach?

The ladder is the hypotenuse (17 ft).
The ground distance is a leg (8 ft).

Recognize: 8-15-17 triple!

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

Finding Area Using the Theorem

Isosceles triangle with sides 10, 10, 12 and height drawn to base creating two right triangles

An isosceles triangle has sides 10, 10, and base 12. Find the area.

Half-base:

Height:

Area:

Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

When to Apply the Pythagorean Theorem

Look for these ACT signals:

  • Right angle symbol in a diagram
  • "Right triangle" stated in the problem
  • Rectangles — diagonals create right triangles
  • Coordinate distances — horizontal and vertical legs
  • Walls, floors, ladders — implied right angles
  • "Find the height" of a triangle
Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

Key Takeaways and Common Mistakes

Remember:

  • — right triangles only
  • Triples: 3-4-5, 5-12-13, 8-15-17, 7-24-25

Watch out:

  • Hypotenuse is opposite the right angle
  • Leg? Subtract, then root
  • means , not
  • Sum ? Acute. Sum ? Obtuse.
Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry
Pythagorean Theorem and Applications | Triangles

Coming Up Next in Triangles

Up next: Special right triangles

  • The 45-45-90 and 30-60-90 patterns
  • Fixed side ratios you can memorize
  • How these connect to the Pythagorean theorem
Grade 10 Mathematics | ACT Geometry