Math, asked by bujidora30, 2 months ago

please answer the question


correct answers would be marked as brainliest ​

Attachments:

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

Both Mercury and the moon have surfaces, or crusts, composed almost entirely of rock and pocked with craters. Unlike Earth, which has an element-rich atmosphere in which incoming meteorites often burn, Mercury and the moon have thin atmospheres, called exospheres, that hold little gas and offer little insulation.Pythagoras theorem states that “In a right-angled triangle, the square of the hypotenuse side is equal to the sum of squares of the other two sides“. ... The sides of a right triangle (say a, b and c) which have positive integer values, when squared, are put into an equation, also called a Pythagorean triple.Both Mercury and the moon have surfaces, or crusts, composed almost entirely of rock and pocked with craters. Unlike Earth, which has an element-rich atmosphere in which incoming meteorites often burn, Mercury and the moon have thin atmospheres, called exospheres, that hold little gas and offer little insulation.Pythagoras theorem states that “In a right-angled triangle, the square of the hypotenuse side is equal to the sum of squares of the other two sides“. ... The sides of a right triangle (say a, b and c) which have positive integer values, when squared, are put into an equation, also called a Pythagorean triple.Both Mercury and the moon have surfaces, or crusts, composed almost entirely of rock and pocked with craters. Unlike Earth, which has an element-rich atmosphere in which incoming meteorites often burn, Mercury and the moon have thin atmospheres, called exospheres, that hold little gas and offer little insulation.

Similar questions