If you're seeing this message, it means we're having trouble loading external resources on our website.

If you're behind a web filter, please make sure that the domains *.kastatic.org and *.kasandbox.org are unblocked.

Main content

Special right triangles intro (part 2)

A 30-60-90 triangle is a special right triangle with angles of 30, 60, and 90 degrees. It has properties similar to the 45-45-90 triangle. The side opposite the 30-degree angle is half the length of the hypotenuse, and the side opposite the 60-degree angle is the length of the short leg times the square root of three. Alternatively, the ratio of the sides is 1 : √3 : 2. Created by Sal Khan.

Want to join the conversation?

  • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user L.H.Marten
    Where did he get the 4 at ? And where did he get the 3/4 at ???
    (7 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
  • male robot hal style avatar for user David Dümig
    i do not necessarily need the property of the 45 - 45 - 90 triangle because I can always derive it from the pythagorean theorem, right ??
    (8 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
  • eggleston orange style avatar for user Aesha
    When Sal goes onto the second special triangle type, 30-60-90 triangles, he gives the equation for when solving B or A using C, in other words, we know the equation for finding the side lengths using the hypotenuse. How do we find the side lengths to find the other side and use it to find the hypotenuse? Is there an equation?
    (3 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
    • mr pink green style avatar for user David Severin
      Rather than an equation per se, it is more thinking about ratios, possibly needing to set up an equation to find the answer, but once you learn the pattern, most of the time you will just be able to write the answers.
      So the ratio for the 30-60-90 triangle is x, x√3, 2x.
      If we have the hypotenuse (lets say 6), then 2x = 6, divide by 2 to get x = 3. The equation will always be the same, so dividing by 2 will always get the side opposite the 30, and to get the side opposite the 60, just tack on √3, answer will be 3√3.
      If we have the side opposite the 30 (lets say 3), we double to get the hypotenuse of 6 and tack on √3 so side opposite 60 is 3√3.
      The hardest is when the side opposite the 60 is an integer (lets say 9). In this case, we set up an equation x√3 = 9, divide by √3 to get x = 9/√3, we do not like roots in denominator, so multiply by √3/√3 which will end up as 9√3/3 = 3√3 for side opposite the 30, and double to get hypotenuse of 6√3. So the pattern would be multiplying the side opposite the 60 by √3/3 to get the side opposite the 30 which is why we like numbers that are multiples of 3 to go through this process, but it does not have to be.
      In 45-45-90 with a ratio of x, x, x√2, if hypotenuse is an integer (say 8), we do the same process of multiplying by √2/2 to get 4√2 for the two legs.
      Many students use a visual of a tic-tac-toe board, left side is the angles of a triangle (either 45-45-90 or 30-60-90), write the ratios in the three middle boxes (either x x x√2 or x x√3 2x), then fill in the given side in the opposite angle slot and calculate from there.
      So, while you can use equations, it is easier to learn patterns which take only a few seconds to calculate.
      (4 votes)
  • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user Christina
    Where does the 4 in h^2/4 () come from?
    (3 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
  • starky tree style avatar for user caitlin.o'dell
    I understand how the different sides relate to the hypotenuse but how do you find the Hypotenuse from the side opposite the 60 degree angle?
    (2 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
  • blobby green style avatar for user Tammy Johnson
    At , I STILL don't understand how you go from subtraction in the previous step (h-squared MINUS h-squared over 4) to multiplication (h-squared TIMES 1 minus 1/4). How is that factoring? Specifically WHICH factoring video explains this?
    (2 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
    • hopper cool style avatar for user Irmak
      I'm sorry, I don't have a video for you, but I can explain it.
      Try to do the step the other way around:
      h^2 * (1 - 1/4) =
      h^2 * 1 + h^2 * -1/4 =
      h^2 - h^2/4

      h^2 is distributed to all elements inside the parentheses. Watch out, though! This distribution only works with subtraction or addition in the parentheses, with division or multiplication, only once is enough, since all factors are anyway distibuted (I like to imagine it them as beign mixed and matched again) in the parentheses.
      If you do the step the right way around, you realise that you have to divide h^2 from these elemans to be able to multiply it later within the parentheses:
      h^2 - h^2/4 =
      h^2 * (h^2/h^2 + (-h^/4)/h^2) =
      h^2 * (1 - 1/4)

      And you're there!
      I hope I could help and that I wasn't too late. :)
      (3 votes)
  • blobby green style avatar for user Arbaaz Ibrahim
    At about minutes into the video, Sal said, he shouldn't have used the A, because it's to do with area or something?
    I didn't understand what he meant by that. The A is the length and not the area right?
    (3 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
  • winston baby style avatar for user Eithan
    at how did (5√2)²+ (5√2)²=100
    (2 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
  • piceratops ultimate style avatar for user ℝ𝕪𝕒𝕟 ✌️
    so one side is A, another side is B, and the hypotenuse is C, correct? He calls c "h", and the two other sides are 1/2(h), and the other side ((√ 3)/2)h, does it matter which one is which or does the side opposite to the 30º always have to be 1/2(h), and the side opposite to 60º angle always have to be ((√ 3)/2)h?
    (2 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
  • winston baby style avatar for user Eithan
    at how did (5√2)+ (5√2)=100
    (2 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user

Video transcript

Sorry for starting the presentation with a cough. I think I still have a little bit of a bug going around. But now I want to continue with the 45-45-90 triangles. So in the last presentation we learned that either side of a 45-45-90 triangle that isn't the hypotenuse is equal to the square route of 2 over 2 times the hypotenuse. Let's do a couple of more problems. So if I were to tell you that the hypotenuse of this triangle-- once again, this only works for 45-45-90 triangles. And if I just draw one 45 you know the other angle's got to be 45 as well. If I told you that the hypotenuse here is, let me say, 10. We know this is a hypotenuse because it's opposite the right angle. And then I would ask you what this side is, x. Well we know that x is equal to the square root of 2 over 2 times the hypotenuse. So that's square root of 2 over 2 times 10. Or, x is equal to 5 square roots of 2. Right? 10 divided by 2. So x is equal to 5 square roots of 2. And we know that this side and this side are equal. Right? I guess we know this is an isosceles triangle because these two angles are the same. So we also that this side is 5 over 2. And if you're not sure, try it out. Let's try the Pythagorean theorem. We know from the Pythagorean theorem that 5 root 2 squared, plus 5 root 2 squared is equal to the hypotenuse squared, where the hypotenuse is 10. Is equal to 100. Or this is just 25 times 2. So that's 50. But this is 100 up here. Is equal to 100. And we know, of course, that this is true. So it worked. We proved it using the Pythagorean theorem, and that's actually how we came up with this formula in the first place. Maybe you want to go back to one of those presentations if you forget how we came up with this. I'm actually now going to introduce another type of triangle. And I'm going to do it the same way, by just posing a problem to you and then using the Pythagorean theorem to figure it out. This is another type of triangle called a 30-60-90 triangle. And if I don't have time for this I will do another presentation. Let's say I have a right triangle. That's not a pretty one, but we use what we have. That's a right angle. And if I were to tell you that this is a 30 degree angle. Well we know that the angles in a triangle have to add up to 180. So if this is 30, this is 90, and let's say that this is x. x plus 30 plus 90 is equal to 180, because the angles in a triangle add up to 180. We know that x is equal to 60. Right? So this angle is 60. And this is why it's called a 30-60-90 triangle-- because that's the names of the three angles in the triangle. And if I were to tell you that the hypotenuse is-- instead of calling it c, like we always do, let's call it h-- and I want to figure out the other sides, how do we do that? Well we can do that using pretty much the Pythagorean theorem. And here I'm going to do a little trick. Let's draw another copy of this triangle, but flip it over draw it the other side. And this is the same triangle, it's just facing the other direction. Right? If this is 90 degrees we know that these two angles are supplementary. You might want to review the angles module if you forget that two angles that share kind of this common line would add up to 180 degrees. So this is 90, this will also be 90. And you can eyeball it. It makes sense. And since we flip it, this triangle is the exact same triangle as this. It's just flipped over the other side. We also know that this angle is 30 degrees. And we also know that this angle is 60 degrees. Right? Well if this angle is 30 degrees and this angle is 30 degrees, we also know that this larger angle-- goes all the way from here to here-- is 60 degrees. Right? Well if this angle is 60 degrees, this top angle is 60 degrees, and this angle on the right is 60 degrees, then we know from the theorem that we learned when we did 45-45-90 triangles that if these two angles are the same then the sides that they don't share have to be the same as well. So what are the sides they don't share? Well, it's this side and this side. So if this side is h then this side is h. Right? But this angle is also 60 degrees. So if we look at this 60 degrees and this 60 degrees, we know that the sides that they don't share are also equal. Well they share this side, so the sides that they don't share are this side and this side. So this side is h, we also know that this side is h. Right? So it turns out that if you have 60 degrees, 60 degrees, and 60 degrees that all the sides have the same lengths, or it's an equilateral triangle. And that's something to keep in mind. And that makes sense too, because an equilateral triangle is symmetric no matter how you look at it. So it makes sense that all of the angles would be the same and all of the sides would have the same length. But, hm. When we originally did this problem we only used half of this equilateral triangle. So we know this whole side right here is of length h. But if that whole side is of length h, well then this side right here, just the base of our original triangle-- and I'm trying to be messy on purpose. We tried another color. This is going to be half of that side. Right? Because that's h over 2, and this is also h over 2. Right over here. So if we go back to our original triangle, and we said that this is 30 degrees and that this is the hypotenuse, because it's opposite the right angle, we know that the side opposite the 30 degree side is 1/2 of the hypotenuse. And just a reminder, how did we do that? Well we doubled the triangle. Turned it into an equilateral triangle. Figured out this whole side has to be the same as the hypotenuse. And this is 1/2 of that whole side. So it's 1/2 of the hypotenuse. So let's remember that. The side opposite the 30 degree side is 1/2 of the hypotenuse. Let me redraw that on another page, because I think this is getting messy. So going back to what I had originally. This is a right angle. This is the hypotenuse-- this side right here. If this is 30 degrees, we just derived that the side opposite the 30 degrees-- it's like what the angle is opening into-- that this is equal to 1/2 the hypotenuse. If this is equal to 1/2 the hypotenuse then what is this side equal to? Well, here we can use the Pythagorean theorem again. We know that this side squared plus this side squared-- let's call this side A-- is equal to h squared. So we have 1/2 h squared plus A squared is equal to h squared. This is equal to h squared over 4 plus A squared, is equal to h squared. Well, we subtract h squared from both sides. We get A squared is equal to h squared minus h squared over 4. So this equals h squared times 1 minus 1/4. This is equal to 3/4 h squared. And once going that's equal to A squared. I'm running out of space, so I'm going to go all the way over here. So take the square root of both sides, and we get A is equal to-- the square root of 3/4 is the same thing as the square root of 3 over 2. And then the square root of h squared is just h. And this A-- remember, this is an area. This is what decides the length of the side. I probably shouldn't have used A. But this is equal to the square root of 3 over 2, times h. So there. We've derived what all the sides relative to the hypotenuse are of a 30-60-90 triangle. So if this is a 60 degree side. So if we know the hypotenuse and we know this is a 30-60-90 triangle, we know the side opposite the 30 degree side is 1/2 the hypotenuse. And we know the side opposite the 60 degree side is the square root of 3 over 2, times the hypotenuse. In the next module I'll show you how using this information, which you may or may not want to memorize-- it's probably good to memorize and practice with, because it'll make you very fast on standardized tests-- how we can use this information to solve the sides of a 30-60-90 triangle very quickly. See you in the next presentation.