QUESTION IMAGE
Question
in a proof of the pythagorean theorem using similarity, what allows you to state that the triangles are similar in order to write the true proportions (\frac{c}{a} = \frac{a}{f}) and (\frac{c}{b} = \frac{b}{e})? (\bigcirc) the geometric mean (altitude) theorem (\bigcirc) the geometric mean (leg) theorem (\bigcirc) the right triangle altitude theorem (\bigcirc) the sss theorem
To determine which theorem allows stating the triangles are similar for the Pythagorean theorem proof using similarity, we analyze each option:
- The geometric mean (altitude) theorem relates the altitude to the segments of the hypotenuse, not directly to triangle similarity for these proportions.
- The geometric mean (leg) theorem involves the leg as a geometric mean of the hypotenuse and its adjacent segment, but it is derived from triangle similarity, not the basis for proving similarity.
- The right triangle altitude theorem (also called the geometric mean theorem or altitude-on-hypotenuse theorem) states that when an altitude is drawn to the hypotenuse of a right triangle, the two smaller right triangles formed are similar to the original triangle and to each other. This similarity (by AA criterion, as all right triangles have a right angle and share an acute angle) allows writing proportions like \(\frac{c}{a}=\frac{a}{f}\) and \(\frac{c}{b}=\frac{b}{e}\).
- The SSS theorem is for proving triangle congruence (or similarity via SSS similarity), but it does not apply here, as we use angle - angle (AA) similarity from the right triangle altitude theorem.
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the right triangle altitude theorem