I was having a discussion on how to double a square which has an area of 1, as discussed in Platos mino dialogue. The method that is proven to work is to bisect the square into 2 triangles, and use the hypotenuse as the side of the new square which has exactly an area of 2. I wanted to see if this solution is also correct. Can anyone tell me the length of the Hypotenuse in this picture?
http://www.chamberband.com/ali/images/square.jpg
The length/width/area of the original black square is 1. Thus each side is 1. Thus the bisected triangle at the north of the square have a base length of .5 (lets say .5 meters, or whatever metric value you want to give it). So...This is a 45 degree triangle bisected into 2 90 degree triangles. Can anyone give me the length of the hypotenuse of the triangles? I'm trying to see if this method also doubles the square or not. Thank you in advance.
EDIT: Fixed spelling for all the english majors that don't know math.
http://www.chamberband.com/ali/images/square.jpg
The length/width/area of the original black square is 1. Thus each side is 1. Thus the bisected triangle at the north of the square have a base length of .5 (lets say .5 meters, or whatever metric value you want to give it). So...This is a 45 degree triangle bisected into 2 90 degree triangles. Can anyone give me the length of the hypotenuse of the triangles? I'm trying to see if this method also doubles the square or not. Thank you in advance.
EDIT: Fixed spelling for all the english majors that don't know math.
