Ask Question
10 October, 21:00

A right triangle has a hypotenuse length of 13 units. One leg has a length of 12 units. Which equation can be used to determine the length of the other leg?

Group of answer choices

LaTeX: a^2=12^2+13^2 a 2 = 12 2 + 13 2

LaTeX: a=/sqrt{13^2-12^2} a = 13 2 - 12 2

LaTeX: a^2=12^2-13^2 a 2 = 12 2 - 13 2

LaTeX: a=/sqrt{12^2+13^2} a = 12 2 + 13 2

+1
Answers (2)
  1. 10 October, 21:05
    0
    We know that a²+b²=c²

    So if you follow the pythagorean theorem, we substitute the hypotenuse for c² and the leg (12) for either a² or b² because a and b are both legs, so it doesn't matter.

    now we have a²+12²=13²

    But I usually take the shortcut ... and instead of a²+12²=13²

    I subtract 12² from 13² (it's the same thing)

    After you subtract 13²-12²=a² ... you find the square root of 13²-12²

    so the answer is LaTeX: a=/sqrt{13^2-12^2}

    a = square root of 13²-12²
  2. 10 October, 21:07
    0
    The length of the other leg is 12
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question 👍 “A right triangle has a hypotenuse length of 13 units. One leg has a length of 12 units. Which equation can be used to determine the length ...” in 📗 Mathematics if the answers seem to be not correct or there’s no answer. Try a smart search to find answers to similar questions.
Search for Other Answers