A right triangle is a triangle with a right angle. In a right triangle, the side opposite the right angle is called the hypotenuse, and the two other sides that make the right angle are called its legs.
Here are some right triangles with the hypotenuse and legs labeled:
If the triangle is a right triangle, then a and b are used to represent the lengths of the legs, and c is used to represent the length of the hypotenuse. The hypotenuse is always the longest side of a right triangle.
Here are some other right triangles:
Notice that for these examples of right triangles, the square of the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the squares of the legs. In the first right triangle in the diagram, 16+9=25, in the second, 16+1=17, and in the third, 9+9=18. Expressed another way, we have:
a2+b2=c2
This is a property of all right triangles, not just these examples, and is often known as the Pythagorean Theorem. The name comes from a mathematician named Pythagoras who lived in ancient Greece around 2,500 BCE, but this property of right triangles was also discovered independently by mathematicians in other ancient cultures including Babylon, India, and China. In China, a name for the same relationship is the Shang Gao Theorem.
It is important to note that this relationship does not hold for all triangles. Here are some triangles that are not right triangles. Notice that the lengths of their sides do not have the special relationship a2+b2=c2. That is, 16+10 does not equal 18, and 10+2 does not equal 16.