-
This triangle that we have right
over here is a right triangle.
-
And it's a right triangle
because it has a 90 degree
-
angle, or has a
right angle in it.
-
Now, we call the longest
side of a right triangle,
-
we call that side,
and you could either
-
view it as the longest side of
the right triangle or the side
-
opposite the 90 degree angle,
it is called a hypotenuse.
-
It's a very fancy word
for a fairly simple idea,
-
just the longest side of a
right triangle or the side
-
opposite the 90 degree angle.
-
And it's just good to
know that because someone
-
might say hypotenuse.
-
You're like, oh, they're just
talking about this side right
-
here, the side longest, the side
opposite the 90 degree angle.
-
Now, what I want
to do in this video
-
is prove a relationship, a
very famous relationship.
-
And you might see
where this is going.
-
A very famous relationship
between the lengths
-
of the sides of
a right triangle.
-
So let's say that the length of
AC, so uppercase A, uppercase
-
C, let's call that
length lowercase a.
-
Let's call the length of BC
lowercase b right over here.
-
I'll use uppercases for
points, lowercases for lengths.
-
And let's call the length of the
hypotenuse, the length of AB,
-
let's call that c.
-
And let's see if we can come
up with the relationship
-
between a, b, and c.
-
And to do that I'm
first going to construct
-
another line or
another segment, I
-
should say, between
c and the hypotenuse.
-
And I'm going to
construct it so that they
-
intersect at a right angle.
-
And you can always do that.
-
And we'll call this point
right over here we'll.
-
Call this point capital D.
-
And if you're wondering,
how can you always do that?
-
You could imagine rotating
this entire triangle like this.
-
This isn't a rigorous proof,
but it just kind of gives you
-
the general idea of
how you can always
-
construct a point like this.
-
So if I've rotated it around.
-
So now our hypotenuse, we're
now sitting on our hypotenuse.
-
This is now point
B, this is point A.
-
So we've rotated the whole
thing all the way around.
-
This is point C. You
could imagine just
-
dropping a rock from point C,
maybe with a string attached,
-
and it would hit the
hypotenuse at a right angle.
-
So that's all we did here to
establish segment CD into where
-
we put our point D
right over there.
-
And the reason why
did that is now we
-
can do all sorts of
interesting relationships
-
between similar triangles.
-
Because we have
three triangles here.
-
We have triangle ADC,
we have triangle DBC,
-
and then we have the
larger original triangle.
-
And we can hopefully
establish similarity
-
between those triangles.
-
And first I'll show you that ADC
is similar to the larger one.
-
Because both of them
have a right angle.
-
ADC has a right angle
right over here.
-
Clearly if this
angle is 90 degrees,
-
then this angle is going
to be 90 degrees as well.
-
They are supplementary.
-
They have to add up to 180.
-
And so they both have
a right angle in them.
-
So the smaller one
has a right angle.
-
The larger one clearly
has a right angle.
-
That's where we started from.
-
And they also both
share this angle right
-
over here, angle
DAC or BAC, however
-
you want to refer to it.
-
So we can actually write
down that triangle.
-
I'm going to start with
the smaller one, ADC.
-
And maybe I'll shade
it in right over here.
-
So this is the triangle
we're talking about.
-
Triangle ADC.
-
And I went from the blue
angle to the right angle
-
to the unlabeled angle from the
point of view of triangle ADC.
-
This right angle isn't applying
to that right over there.
-
It's applying to
the larger triangle.
-
So we could say triangle
ADC is similar to triangle--
-
once again, you want to
start at the blue angle.
-
A. Then we went to
the right angle.
-
So we have to go to
the right angle again.
-
So it's ACB.
-
And because they're
similar, we can set up
-
a relationship between
the ratios of their sides.
-
For example, we know the
ratio of corresponding sides
-
are going to do, well, in
general for a similar triangle,
-
we know the ratio of
the corresponding sides
-
are going to be a constant.
-
So we could take the ratio of
the hypotenuse of the smaller
-
triangle.
-
So the hypotenuse is AC.
-
So AC over the hypotenuse
over the larger one, which
-
is a AB, AC over AB is going
to be the same thing as AD
-
as one of the legs, AD.
-
And just to show that, I'm just
taking corresponding points
-
on both similar triangles,
this is AD over AC.
-
You could look at these
triangles yourself and show,
-
look, AD, point AD, is
between the blue angle
-
and the right angle.
-
Sorry, side AD is between the
blue angle and the right angle.
-
Side AC is between the blue
angle and the right angle
-
on the larger triangle.
-
So both of these are
from the larger triangle.
-
These are the corresponding
sides on the smaller triangle.
-
And if that is confusing
looking at them visually,
-
as long as we wrote our
similarity statement correctly,
-
you can just find the
corresponding points.
-
AC corresponds to AB
on the larger triangle,
-
AD on the smaller
triangle corresponds
-
to AC on the larger triangle.
-
And we know that AC, we can
rewrite that as lowercase a.
-
AC is lowercase a.
-
We don't have any
label for AD or for AB.
-
Sorry, we do have
a label for AB.
-
That is c right over here.
-
We don't have a label for AD.
-
So AD, let's just
call that lowercase d.
-
So lowercase d applies to
that part right over there.
-
c applies to that entire
part right over there.
-
And then we'll call DB,
let's call that length e.
-
That'll just make things a
little bit simpler for us.
-
So AD we'll just call d.
-
And so we have a over
c is equal to d over a.
-
If we cross multiply, you have
a times a, which is a squared,
-
is equal to c times
d, which is cd.
-
So that's a little bit
of an interesting result.
-
Let's see what we can do
with the other triangle
-
right over here.
-
So this triangle
right over here.
-
So once again, it
has a right angle.
-
The larger one
has a right angle.
-
And they both share this
angle right over here.
-
So by angle, angle
similarity, the two triangles
-
are going to be similar.
-
So we could say triangle
BDC, we went from pink
-
to right to not labeled.
-
So triangle BDC is
similar to triangle.
-
Now we're going to look
at the larger triangle,
-
we're going to start
at the pink angle.
-
B. Now we're going to
go to the right angle.
-
CA.
-
BCA.
-
From pink angle to right
angle to non-labeled angle,
-
at least from the
point of view here.
-
We labeled it before
with that blue.
-
So now let's set up some
type of relationship here.
-
We can say that the ratio on
the smaller triangle, BC, side
-
BC over BA, BC over
BA, once again,
-
we're taking the
hypotenuses of both of them.
-
So BC over BA is going
to be equal to BD.
-
Let me do this in another color.
-
BD.
-
So this is one of the legs.
-
BD.
-
The way I drew it
is the shorter legs.
-
BD over BC.
-
I'm just taking the
corresponding vertices.
-
Over BC.
-
And once again, we know BC is
the same thing as lowercase b.
-
BC is lowercase b.
-
BA is lowercase c.
-
And then BD we defined
as lowercase e.
-
So this is lowercase e.
-
We can cross
multiply here and we
-
get b times b, which, and I've
mentioned this in many videos,
-
cross multiplying is really
the same thing as multiplying
-
both sides by both denominators.
-
b times b is b squared
is equal to ce.
-
And now we can do something
kind of interesting.
-
We can add these two statements.
-
Let me rewrite the
statement down here.
-
So b squared is equal to ce.
-
So if we add the
left hand sides,
-
we get a squared plus b squared.
-
a squared plus b squared
is equal to cd plus ce.
-
And then we have a c
both of these terms,
-
so we could factor it out.
-
So this is going to be equal
to-- we can factor out the c.
-
It's going to be equal
to c times d plus e.
-
c times d plus e and
close the parentheses.
-
Now what is d plus e?
-
d is this length,
e is this length.
-
So d plus e is actually
going to be c as well.
-
So this is going to be c.
-
So you have c times c,
which is just the same thing
-
as c squared.
-
So now we have an
interesting relationship.
-
We have that a squared plus b
squared is equal to c squared.
-
Let me rewrite that.
-
a squared.
-
Well, let me just do
an arbitrary new color.
-
I deleted that by accident,
so let me rewrite it.
-
So we've just established
that a squared plus b squared
-
is equal to c squared.
-
And this is just an
arbitrary right triangle.
-
This is true for any
two right triangles.
-
We've just established that
the sum of the squares of each
-
of the legs is equal to the
square of the hypotenuse.
-
And this is probably
what's easily
-
one of the most famous
theorem in mathematics, named
-
for Pythagoras.
-
Not clear if he's the first
person to establish this,
-
but it's called the
Pythagorean Theorem.
-
And it's really the basis of,
well, all not all of geometry,
-
but a lot of the geometry
that we're going to do.
-
And it forms the basis of a
lot of the trigonometry we're
-
going to do.
-
And it's a really
useful way, if you
-
know two of the sides
of a right triangle,
-
you can always find the third.