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SW-MO ARML Practice – 11/17/2013 Even though we go beyond SOH-CAH-TOA – don’t forget it! Use the unit circle concept to approximate the sine and cosine of GIT and HIP . What about the tangent? Secant? Cosecant? Give the equation of the unit circle: This leads to the basic Pythagorean Identity: From this, we can easily derive two more: Sum/Difference Formulas: Cosine: cos( ) cos cos sin sin Sine: sin( ) sin cos cos sin Tangent: tan( ) “Crunchy Cashew Chicken is a Springfield Sin” “Successful Springfield Cardinals Can Swing” tan tan 1 tan tan Double-Angle Formulas: Cosine: cos(2 ) cos2 ( ) sin 2 ( ) 2cos2 ( ) 1 1 2sin 2 ( ) Sine: sin(2 ) 2sin cos Tangent: tan(2 ) 2 tan( ) 1 tan 2 ( ) Half-Angle Formulas: 1 cos( ) Cosine: cos 2 2 1 cos( ) Sine: sin 2 2 sin 1 cos Tangent: tan sin 1 cos 2 Cofunction Formulas: sin cos 2 cos sin 2 tan cot 2 cot tan 2 csc sec 2 sec csc 2 Law of Sines: sin A sin B sin C a b c Area of a Triangle: A Law of Cosines: c 2 a 2 b2 2ab cos C bh 1 or A ab sin C or A s(s a)(s b)(s c) 2 2 Some problems to do WITH NO CALCULATOR. Most are stolen from Art of Problem Solving. NOTE: If you are seeing a big mess, you have missed an elegant option!! 1. Find the exact value for sin(105) 9 2. Find the exact value for cos 8 3. Evaluate: tan(10) tan(20) tan(30) tan(40) tan(50) tan(60) tan(70) tan(80) 4. Write in the form asin(x°): sin13 sin167 cos13 cos167sin13 sin167 cos13 cos167 5. Find x if arctan x tan1(4) tan1(6) 6. Given positive integer n and a number c, -1 < c < 1, for how many values of q in [0, 2π) is sin(nq) = c ? 7. Given ABC , with side a opposite A (and so on), find sinA + sin2B + sin3C if a = 3, b = 4, and c = 5. 8. Compute the SMALLEST positive angle x (in radians) such that: 8sin x cos5 x 8sin 5 x cos x 1 9. If A = 20° and B = 25°, then find the value of (1 + tanA)(1 + tanB). 10. Find the area of the incircle of a triangle with side lengths 13, 14, and 15. 11. Find the length of the altitude to one of the legs in the triangle with sides: 10, 10, 12. 12. If the sides of a triangle are in the ratio 4:6:8, then find the cosine of the smallest angle. 13. In ABC , CD is the bisector of C with D on AB . If cos C 2 13 and CD 6 , compute 1 1 . a b 14. The sides of a regular pentagon are extended to form a five-pointed star. If the ratio of the area of the pentagon to the area of the star equals sin , for 0 90 , compute the value of . 15. Compute the smallest positive angle x, in degrees, such that tan 4 x cos x sin x cos x sin x 16. The diagonals of rhombus ABCD are 10 and 4. Rhombus CDEF is drawn in the same plane, with DE DA . Compute the area of rhombus CDEF. 11-17-2013 – Solutions 1. sin(105) sin(60 45) 9 2. cos 8 6 2 4 1 cos 4 2 2 cos 2 2 8 3. Turn the tangents into sines and cosines and recall the cofunction formula: sin cos 90 , so everything cancels and you get 1. 4. Use the cofunction formulas and the fact that sin(180 ) sin and cos(180 ) cos to simplify the statement to: 2cos 13 2sin 13 4sin 13 cos 13 2sin 26 5. Put each side of the equation into the tangent function as input. Use the sum formula for the right side! 10 23 6. Since n is a positive integer, you will go around the unit circle an integer number of times, each time finding two values, since c 1 , so there will be 2n solutions. 7. Sketch ABC . Note that 3-4-5 is a Pythagorean Triple, so this is a right triangle. 3 double angle for sin(2B). For sin(3C), note that C is a right angle, so find sin 2 then becomes 14 . 25 Use the and the sum 5 5 4 4 8. Start by factoring the GCF: 8sin x cos x 8sin x cos x 1 8sin x cos x cos x sin x 1 8sin x cos x(cos2 x sin2 x)(cos2 x sin2 x) 1 4sin(2x)cos(2x) 1 1 2sin(4x) 1 So, sin(4 x) 1 2 , 4 x , x 6 24 9. Note that 20 + 25 = 45. Let B = 45° – A. Then, since tan(45 A) 1 tan A (1 tan A)(1 tan B) (1 tan A) 1 1 tan A 1 tan A (1 tan A) 1 (1 tan A) 1 tan A a tan A 2 1 tan A 1 tan A , we get: 1 tan A 10. Find the area of the triangle using Heron’s Formula. Then recall the formula for finding the area of a regular polygon is ½ aP where a is the apothem (radius of the incircle) and P is the perimeter of the polygon. This formula will also apply to triangles. A 16 11. Drop an altitude to the base of the isosceles triangle and find the area. Then consider a leg as the new “base” and use the known area to get the length of the altitude. h = 9.6 12. Start by reducing the ratio to 2:3:4. Let the three sides be 2k, 3k, 4k and use the Law of Cosines. Since the smallest angle is requested, set it up as: 2k 2 3k 4k 2 3k 4k cos . The 2 2 k 2 ' s will cancel and you get cos 7 . 8 13. Set up the triangle as below. Add the areas of the two smaller triangle to equal the area of the larger triangle. A(ACD) 3b sin C 2 2 2 b A 6 D A(BCD) 3a sin 2 a 1 cos( )= 2 3 B A(ACB) 1 ab sin 2 So, 3b sin 3a sin 1 ab sin 2 2 2 And, 3b sin 3a sin ab sin cos 2 2 2 2 Or, ab 3b 3a ab 1 1 1 3b 3a ab cos 3b 3a 3 3ab 9ab a b 9 2 14. Without loss of generality, let DC = 2, making DH = 1. Since the area of ΔDHG is 1/10 the area of the pentagon and the area of ΔDFG is 1/10 the area of the star, and since DC GF , A( pentagon) A DHG GH GH A(star ) A DFG GF GH HF Using SOH-CAH-TOA, we get: sin 54 GH tan 54 cos 54 GH HF tan 54 tan 72 sin 54 sin 72 cos 54 cos 72 sin 54 cos 72 sin 54 cos 72 sin 54 cos 72 sin 72 cos 54 sin126 sin 54 cos 72 cos 72 sin18 sin 54 Answer: 18° sin 4 x cos x sin x . Cross multiply and look for sum formulas. You get to cos 4 x cos x sin x tan 5x 1, so x = 9° 15. Hint: Start with: 16. Let m BCD . The side of each rhombus is A(CDEF) = 29 29 sin 90 29cos Using the Law of Cosines, cos 29 29 16 21 2 29 29 Then, A(CDEF) = 29 21 21 29 29 . Then,