Page:The Algebra of Mohammed Ben Musa (1831).djvu/96

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

( 80 )

the area: it is forty-three and a little.[1] Here is the figure:

There are also acute-angled triangles, with different sides. Their area will be found by means of the line representing the height and the point from which it proceeds. Take, for instance, a triangle, one side of which is fifteen yards, another fourteen, and the third thirteen yards. In order to find the point from which the line marking the height does arise, you may take for the basis any side you choose; e.g. that which is fourteen yards long. The point from which the line (60) representing the height does arise, lies in this basis at an unknown distance from either of the two other sides. Let us try to find its unknown distance from the side which is thirteen yards long. Multiply this distance by itself; it becomes an [unknown] square. Subtract this from thirteen multiplied by itself; that is, one hundred and sixty-nine. The remainder is one hundred and sixty-nine less a square. The root from this is the height. The remainder of the basis is fourteen less thing. We multiply this by itself; it becomes one hundred and ninety-six, and a square less twenty-


  1. The root is 43.3+