Stage 15 · Triangles

15.6  Right Triangles and the Pythagorean Theorem

One right angle, the longest side opposite it, and the most famous equation in geometry: a² + b² = c².

Ages 11–14 · Reasoning, one step at a time
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Point 2 of 6 in this lesson: 15.6.2 The Pythagorean theorem

15.6.2 The Pythagorean theorem

Here is the heart of the lesson. Call the two legs a and b, and the hypotenuse c. Build a square on each side, pointing outward. The Pythagorean theorem says the area of the big square (on the hypotenuse) is exactly the sum of the areas of the two smaller squares (on the legs):

a2 + b2 = c2

Read it as areas first, not symbols. A square on a side of length a has area a2. The theorem promises that if you could pour the two leg-squares into the hypotenuse-square, they would fill it to the brim — no gaps, no overflow. With legs 3 and 4, that is 9 + 16 = 25, and 25 is exactly 52 — so the hypotenuse is 5. Drag the slider below and watch the two small areas always add up to the big one.

Why it works (by area)

Take four copies of the right triangle and pack them into a big square of side (a + b) two different ways. One way leaves a tilted square of side c in the middle; the other leaves two squares, of sides a and b. Same big square, same four triangles removed — so what's left over must be equal: c2 = a2 + b2. That is one of the hundreds of known proofs.

Try it The squares on the sides add up
Change leg a. The two leg-squares (areas a2 and b2) always fill the hypotenuse-square exactly.
Leg a 3
(leg b is fixed at 4)
eastmath.com · 15.6 Right Triangles and the Pythagorean Theorem · 15.6.2 The Pythagorean theorem