Pythagoras Project
Pythagoras Project
Pythagoras Project
Similar triangles. There are two ways to know that two triangles are similar:
1. All corresponding angles in the triangles (i.e. angles in the same place
in each triangle) are equal.
2. The sides of the triangles are in the same proportions.
Area of a rectangle. The area of a rectangle is its length times its breadth. A
square is a special type of rectangle where the length and breadth are
equal.
Area of a right-angled triangle. The area is 12 × base × height. (It is not hard
to see that a right-angled triangle can be “doubled” by placing an exact
copy of it next to it to form a rectangle.)
Four triangles are drawn inside a 10-unit by 10-unit square, as shown below.
1.11 How many times can triangle 4 fit into the square?
You will have noticed that all four triangles are the same shape. Their corre-
sponding angles are the same, but the lengths of the corresponding sides differ.
Because their corresponding angles are equal, we call them similar triangles.
From experience, people discovered that a triangle with its sides in the ratio
3 : 4 : 5 is a right-angled triangle. It turns out that if we have a triangle with its
sides in a ratio of 6 : 8 : 10, it’s also a right-angled triangle. If we simplify the
ratio, we get 3 : 4 : 5. This means that any triangle that is similar to a 3 : 4 : 5
triangle is also a right-angled triangle, because its sides will be in the same
proportions.
Because 3 : 4 : 5 is special in this way, we call it a Pythagorean triple. It is not the
only triple, and you will find some others in the next task.
[9]
TASK 2: Triples
For this task, you are going to find three other triangles that have whole-number
lengths and are also right-angled triangles. In other words, you are going to
find some different Pythagorean triples.
Follow the steps below and fill in the table that follows:
1. Open https://www.geogebratube.org/student/m138710.
2. By moving the points labelled A and B in the diagram, find three
different right-angled triangles where all three side lengths are whole
numbers. Two of your triangles MAY NOT be 3 : 4 : 5 triangles, but
must be in a different ratio.
3. In the table below, record the lengths of the sides for each of the right-
angled triangles that you find. Remember that all three lengths must
be whole numbers.
4. Once you have calculated the lengths of the sides, calculate the ratio
of the sides to one another, and write the fully simplified ratio in the
table.
Example: 3 4 5 3:4:5
Triangle 1:
Triangle 2:
Triangle 3:
For this task, you will investigate a number of different right-angled triangles
using GeoGebra to look for a pattern. Answer the questions in the spaces
provided.
Open https://www.geogebratube.org/student/m138697.
3.1 By moving the blue points in the Geogebra file, create different right-
angled triangles to help complete the following table. Note that a, b,
and c are lengths of sides, and are labelled on the diagram. Side-lengths
MUST be whole numbers for this task.
a b c a2 b2 c2
Example: 3 4 5 9 16 25
Triangle 1:
Triangle 2:
Triangle 3:
Triangle 4:
Triangle 5:
(10)
3.2 Describe (in words) a relationship that you notice is true for all five
triangles. (If you struggle to find a relationship, consider asking someone or
looking online.)
(3)
3.3 Write down the relationship using symbols and mathematical notation:
(3)
[16]
a2 + b2 = c2 .
Pythagoras definitely wasn’t the first person to know of the theorem, but he
was probably the first person known to have proved it.
We will first look at the proof using a triangle with known measurements, and
then we will use algebra.
4.1 The following two diagrams show Pythagoras’s idea of a proof by
rearrangement:
Y
X
8 Z
15
4.1.5 In the square on the right, there are two smaller white squares,
Y and Z. What is the area of Z?
4.1.8 Hence calculate the area of all the patterned triangles in the
diagram on the left.
4.1.9 Calculate the area of all the patterned triangles in the diagram
on the right.
4.1.11 What is the area of the white square X in the diagram on the
left? Give a reason for your answer.
(13)
By doing the above, we can see that there may be a general method for
finding the hypotenuse for any right-angled triangle.
c c
a Y a
b b
Answer the following in the spaces provided. Note that answers will
be algebraic and not numeric.
4.2.1 What is the total side-length of the square diagram on the left?
4.2.5 In the square on the right, there are two smaller squares, Y
and Z. What is the area of Z?
4.2.10 Hence calculate the combined area of the two squares Y and Z
in the right-hand diagram.
(8)
[21]
TASK 5: Behold!
Bhāskara, a 12th-century Indian Mathematician, included this proof in Lilavati,
a book he wrote on Mathematics. Along with the diagrams shown below, he
wrote only one word: “Behold!”
a b
The two diagrams are both made up of four copies of a right-angled triangle
with sides a, b, and c. To get from the diagram on the left to the one on the
right, the two shaded triangles on the top-left are moved to new positions. To
understand how the diagram on the right is formed, go to http://britton.
disted.camosun.bc.ca/geometry/behold.html.
5.1 What is the area of the diagram on the left? (Hint: it is a square.)
5.2 What is the total area of the diagram on the right? Do not perform any
calculations, but give a reason for your answer.
a b
5.3 What is the side-length of the square X, and what is its area?
5.4 What is the side-length of the square Y and what is its area?
5.5 Hence find the combined area of squares X and Y, in terms of a and b.
5.6 Using your solutions to 5.2 and 5.5, write down an equation showing
the relationship between a, b, and c.
[9]
TOTAL: 60