Math, asked by Naveen9257, 1 year ago

proof Pythagoras theorem

Answers

Answered by nilunice
0
Pythagoras and his colleagues are credited with many contributions to mathematics. The following is an investigation of how the Pythagorean theorem has been proved over the years. The theorem states that: "The square on the hypotenuse of a right triangle is equal to the sum of the squares on the two leg

Naveen9257: i think you don't know the answer
Naveen9257: don't do this again to take points
Naveen9257: understand you foolish girl
nilunice: shut up i know
Naveen9257: then answer it
nilunice: one. In algebraic terms, a2 + b2 = c2 where c is the hypotenuse while a and b are the sides of the triangle. ... I plan to present several geometric proofs of the Pythagorean Theorem.
Naveen9257: i know this
nilunice: understood
Naveen9257: proof it
nilunice: Have done the proof
Answered by Anonymous
1

Step-by-step explanation:

Pythagoras' theorem :-

→ In a right triangle, the square of the length of the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the squares of the lengths of the other two sides.

Step-by-step explanation:

It's prove :-

➡ Given :-

→ A △ABC in which ∠ABC = 90° .

➡To prove :-

→ AC² = AB² + BC² .

➡ Construction :-

→ Draw BD ⊥ AC .

➡ Proof :-

In △ADB and △ABC , we have

∠A = ∠A ( common ) .

∠ADB = ∠ABC [ each equal to 90° ] .

∴ △ADB ∼ △ABC [ By AA-similarity ] .

⇒ AD/AB = AB/AC .

⇒ AB² = AD × AC ............(1) .

In △BDC and △ABC , we have

∠C = ∠C ( common ) .

∠BDC = ∠ABC [ each equal to 90° ] .

∴ △BDC ∼ △ABC [ By AA-similarity ] .

⇒ DC/BC = BC/AC .

⇒ BC² = DC × AC. ............(2) .

Add in equation (1) and (2) , we get

⇒ AB² + BC² = AD × AC + DC × AC .

⇒ AB² + BC² = AC( AD + DC ) .

⇒ AB² + BC² = AC × AC .

 \huge \green{ \boxed{ \sf \therefore AC^2 = AB^2 + BC^2 }}

Hence, it is proved.

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