How To Find The Sides of A Right Triangle
How To Find The Sides of A Right Triangle
How To Find The Sides of A Right Triangle
There are a few methods of obtaining right triangle side lengths. Depending on what is given, you can
use different relationships or laws to find the missing side:
If you know two other sides of the right triangle, it's the easiest option; all you need to do is apply the
Pythagorean theorem:
a² + b² = c²
if leg a is the missing side, then transform the equation to the form when a is on one side, and take a
square root:
a = √(c² - b²)
b = √(c² - a²)
c = √(a² + b²)
Right triangle with law of sines formulas. a over sin(α) equals b over sin(β) equals c, because sin(90°) = 1
Apply the law of sines or trigonometry to find the right triangle side lengths:
a = c * sin(α) or a = c * cos(β)
b = c * sin(β) or b = c * cos(α)
a = b * tan(α)
b = a * tan(β)
As we remember from basic triangle area formula, we can calculate the area by multiplying triangle
height and base and dividing the result by two. A right triangle is a special case of a scalene triangle, in
which one leg is the height when the second leg is the base, so the equation gets simplified to:
area = a * b / 2
For example, if we know only the right triangle area and the length of the leg a, we can derive the
equation for other sides:
b = 2 * area / a
If you know one angle apart from the right angle, calculation of the third one is a piece of cake:
Given β: α = 90 - β
Given α: β = 90 - α
However, if only two sides of a triangle are given, finding the angles of a right triangle requires applying
some basic trigonometric functions:
for α
and for β
How do you solve a right angle triangle with only one side?
To solve a triangle with one side, you also need one of the non-right angled angles. If not, it is
impossible:
If you have the hypotenuse, multiply it by sin(θ) to get the length of the side opposite to the angle.
Alternatively, multiply the hypotenuse by cos(θ) to get the side adjacent to the angle.
If you have the non-hypotenuse side adjacent to the angle, divide it by cos(θ) to get the length of the
hypotenuse.
Alternatively, multiply this length by tan(θ) to get the length of the side opposite to the angle.
If you have an angle and the side opposite to it, you can divide the side length by sin(θ) to get the
hypotenuse.
Alternatively, divide the length by tan(θ) to get the length of the side adjacent to the angle.
How to find the missing side of a right triangle? How to find the angle? Example
Let's show how to find the sides of a right triangle with this tool:
Assume we want to find the missing side given area and one side. Select the proper option from a
drop-down list. It's the third one.
Type in the given values. For example, an area of a right triangle is equal to 28 in² and b = 9 in.
Our right triangle side and angle calculator displays missing sides and angles! Now we know that:
a = 6.222 in
c = 10.941 in
α = 34.66°
β = 55.34°
Now, let's check how does finding angles of a right triangle work:
Refresh the calculator. Pick the option you need. Assume that we have two sides and we want to find
all angles. The default option is the right one.
Enter the side lengths. Our right triangle has a hypotenuse equal to 13 in and a leg a = 5 in.
Missing side and angles appear. In our example, b = 12 in, α = 67.38° and β = 22.62°.
FAQ
If a right triangle is isosceles (i.e., its two non-hypotenuse sides are the same length) it has one line of
symmetry. Otherwise, the triangle will have no lines of symmetry.
Can a right angled triangle have equal sides?
No, a right triangle cannot have all 3 sides equal, as all three angles cannot also be equal, as one has to
be 90° by definition. A right triangle can, however, have its two non-hypotenuse sides be equal in
length. This would also mean the two other angles are equal to 45°.
Not all right angled triangles are similar, although some can be. They are similar if all their angles are the
same length, or if the ratio of 2 of their sides is the same.