1/2*base of triangle*height(the perpendicular)=Area of right angled triangle
Volume = Area of the base X height of prism. This formula works for all prisms, not just triangular prisms. Area of a triangle = height of triangle X 1/2 X base of triangle.
area=(1/2)*base*height
To find the volume of a triangular prism, find the area of one of the triangles (base of the prism) first (base x height divided by 2). When you have the area of the triangle, then multiply the area of the triangle by the height of the prism, *not the height of the base.
The area of a right angle is nothing bro, if you mean the area of a right angle triangle then uts simple formula is : 1/2×Base×Height(Perpendicular of the right angled triangle) Alternative method: Heron's formula!
The 'base' is the length of the side that the triangle is standing on.The 'height' is the vertical distance from that line to the vertex atthe top of the triangle.
It is base*vertical distance between top and bottom (the perpendicular height).
To draw a triangle with one square corner (a right triangle), start by drawing a horizontal line for the base. From one end of this line, draw a vertical line upward, which will form the right angle. Finally, connect the top of the vertical line to the other end of the base line with a diagonal line, completing the triangle. Ensure the angle between the base and the vertical line measures 90 degrees for it to have a square corner.
Square feet is a measure of area and does not have to be square. The area of a triangle is 0.5*base*height where the base and height are expressed in feet. (The height is the vertical distance from the apex t the base.)
It does not matter. Any side can be the base. Then, the height is the perpendicular distance between that side and the opposite vertex.
Area circle: π × radius² Area triangle: ½ × base × height Area Parallelogram: base × height Area: Rectangle: length × width In a triangle, the base is any side between two vertices and the height is the perpendicular distance from this side to the third vertex. In a parallelogram the base is any side. The height is the perpendicular distance between this side and the side parallel to it.
Draw an isosceles triangle with a base A-C of length 60. The apex of the triangle, point B, is length 50 from both point A and point C. That's your triangle. Drop a "vertical" from B to the base - where it will form a right angle with that line segment and, because the sides are the same length, will bisect the base. That's the line segment you're looking to find the length of. So let's. The base, length 60, is divided into two equal segments by the vertical. That's two length-30 pieces. Notice that your figure, the isosceles triangle with that vertical drawn in, is two "back-to-back" right triangles, each with a base of length 30 and a hypotenuse of length 50. We can "cheat" here and see that the triangles have sides of length 30, 40 and 50. We also know that 3, 4, 5 is a "magic" right triangle because 32 + 42 = 52 (9 + 16 = 25). Our triangle in this problem has sides (conveniently) ten times the length of the 3, 4, 5 triangle. That makes them 30, 40 and 50 in length. The height of the triangle is 40 miles. If you want to work it through, 302 + h2 = 502 900 + h2 = 2500 h2 = 2500 - 900 = 1600 = 40 Our work checks.
assuming its an isosceles triangle, then its 16 cm high
The vertical height.
A triangle is 2D, and has a square base. A cone is 3D, and has a circular base.
The vertical cross section of a square pyramid is a triangle. When the pyramid is sliced vertically through its apex and down to the base, the resulting shape is a triangular profile that includes the apex at the top and the edges of the base at the bottom. The height of the triangle corresponds to the height of the pyramid, while the base of the triangle spans the width of the base of the pyramid.
Base * Vertical distance between bases (height).