Relation between the side lengths and altitude of a right triangle
Base Pytha- gorean triple
AC
BC
CD
AB
(3, 4, 5)
20 = 4×5
15 = 3×5
12 = 3×4
25 = 52
(5, 12, 13)
156 = 12×13
65 = 5×13
60 = 5×12
169 = 132
(8, 15, 17)
255 = 15×17
136 = 8×17
120 = 8×15
289 = 172
(7, 24, 25)
600 = 24×25
175 = 7×25
168 = 7×24
625 = 252
(20, 21, 29)
609 = 21×29
580 = 20×29
420 = 20×21
841 = 292
All positive integer primitive inverse-Pythagorean triples having up to three digits, with the hypotenuse for comparison
In geometry, the inverse Pythagorean theorem (also known as the reciprocal Pythagorean theorem[1] or the upside down Pythagorean theorem[2]) is as follows:[3]
Let A, B be the endpoints of the hypotenuse of a right triangle△ABC. Let D be the foot of a perpendicular dropped from C, the vertex of the right angle, to the hypotenuse. Then
This theorem should not be confused with proposition 48 in book 1 of Euclid's Elements, the converse of the Pythagorean theorem, which states that if the square on one side of a triangle is equal to the sum of the squares on the other two sides then the other two sides contain a right angle.
Proof
The area of triangle △ABC can be expressed in terms of either AC and BC, or AB and CD:
where the two parameters determining the shape of the curve, a and b are each CD.
Substituting x with AC and y with BC gives
Inverse-Pythagorean triples can be generated using integer parameters t and u as follows.[4]
Application
If two identical lamps are placed at A and B, the theorem and the inverse-square law imply that the light intensity at C is the same as when a single lamp is placed at D.