BELIEVE ME NOT! - - A SKEPTICs GUIDE
Next: Solid Geometry
Up: Geometry
Previous: Areas of Plane Figures
The square of the length of the hypotenuse of a right triangle
is equal to the sum of the squares of the lengths of the two
shorter sides.
I.e. for the Left Hemisphere we have
where a, b and c are defined by the labelled picture
of a right triangle, shown in Fig. 4.2,
which cathects the Right Hemisphere and gets the two working together.
Figure:
A right triangle with hypotenuse c and short sides a and b.
The right angle is indicated and the angle
is defined as shown.
Note that a is always the (length of the) side ``across from'' the
vertex forming the angle .
This convention is essential
in the trigonometric definitions to follow.
|
Jess H. Brewer
1998-09-06