Ask Question
Today, 00:59

Which of the following sets of lengths can Sean use to make a right triangle?

Group of answer choices

{5 cm, 15 cm, 18 cm}

{6 cm, 12 cm, 16 cm}

{5 cm, 13 cm, 15 cm}

{8 cm, 15 cm, 17 cm}

+4
Answers (1)
  1. Today, 03:01
    0
    If we know your Pythagorean Triples we can immediately recognize that the last choice is a right triangle:

    8² + 15² = 17²

    If you don't know your Pythagorean Triples, it's worth learning the first few off the list because teachers use them in problems all the time. But for now let's just exhaustively check the Pythagorean Theorem for each triangle. We don't have to multiply everything out; we can analyze the common factors. If two have a common factor that the third one doesn't have, there's no way for the Pythagorean Theorem to add up.

    Clearly 5²+15² is a multiple of 5 but 18² isn't so that one isn't a right triangle.

    6²+12² is a multiple of 6, 16² isn't a multiple of 6, not an RT.

    15²-5² is a multiple of 5, 13² isn't, no joy.

    8²+15² = 64 + 225 = 289 = 17² - - that's a real right triangle, a valid Pythagorean Triple.
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Get an answer to your question ✅ “Which of the following sets of lengths can Sean use to make a right triangle? Group of answer choices {5 cm, 15 cm, 18 cm} {6 cm, 12 cm, 16 ...” in 📙 Mathematics if there is no answer or all answers are wrong, use a search bar and try to find the answer among similar questions.
Search for Other Answers