Chapter 2: Problem 9
Show algebraically that any square number is the sum of two consecutive triangular numbers.
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Key Concepts
These are the key concepts you need to understand to accurately answer the question.
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Chapter 2: Problem 9
Show algebraically that any square number is the sum of two consecutive triangular numbers.
These are the key concepts you need to understand to accurately answer the question.
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Show that the areas of similar segments of circles are proportional to the squares on their chords. Assume the result that the areas of circles are proportional to the squares on their diameters.
Represent \(8 / 9\) as a sum of distinct unit fractions. Express the result in the Greek notation. Note that the answer to this problem is not unique.
Show that in a Pythagorean triple, if one of the terms is odd, then two of them must be odd and one even.
Thales is said to have invented a method of finding distances of ships from shore by use of the angle-side-angle theorem. Here is a possible method: Suppose \(A\) is a point on shore and \(S\) is a ship (Fig. 2.16). Measure the distance \(A C\) along. a perpendicular to \(A C\) and bisect it at \(B\). Draw \(C E\) at right angles to \(A C\) and pick point \(E\) on it in a straight line with \(B\) and \(S .\) Show that \(\triangle E B C \cong \triangle S B A\) and therefore that \(S A=E C\)
Show that if a right triangle has one leg of length 1 and a hypotenuse of length 2, then the second leg is incommensurable with the first leg. (In modern terms, this is equivalent to showing that \(\sqrt{3}\) is irrational.) Use an argument similar to the proposed Pythagorean argument that the diagonal of a unit square is incommensurable with the side.
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