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Preparing for the SAT II Triangle Trigonometry Topics Basis of Trigonometry The Six Ratios Solving Right Triangles Special Right Triangles Law of Sines Law of Cosines ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 2 Basis of Trigonometry Trigonometry, or "triangle measurement," developed as a means to calculate the lengths of sides of right triangles. It is based upon similar triangle relationships. ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 3 Right Triangle Trigonometry You can quickly prove that the two right triangles with an acute angle of 25°are similar All right triangles containing an angle of 25° are similar You could think of this as the family of 25° right triangles. Every triangle in the family is25similar. We could imagine such a family of triangles for any acute angle. ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 25 4 Right Triangle Trigonometry In any right triangle in the family, the ratio of the side opposite the acute angle to the hypotenuse will always be the same, and the ratios of other pairs of sides will remain constant. ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 5 The Six Ratios the hypotenuse, the side opposite a particular acute angle, A, and the side adjacent to the acute angle A, opposite If the three sides of the right angle are labeled as A adjacent six different ratios are possible. ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 6 The Six Ratios opposite sin( A) hypotenuse hypotenuse csc( A) opposite adjacent cos( A) hypotenuse hypotenuse sec( A) adjacent opposite tan( A) adjacent adjacent cot( A) opposite ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 7 Solving Right Triangles With these six ratios, it is possible to solve for any unknown side of the right triangle, if another side and an acute angle are known, or to find the angle if two sides are known. Once upon a time, students had to rely on tables to look up these values. Now the sine, cosine, and tangent of an angle can be found on your calculator. ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 8 Sample Problem In right triangle ABC, hypotenuse is 6 cm long, and A measures 32. Find the length of the shorter leg. 58 6 Make a sketch 32 If one angle is 32, the other is 58 The shorter leg is opposite the smaller angle, so you need to find the side opposite the 32 angle. ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 9 Choosing the Ratio ... Find the length of the shorter leg. You need a ratio that talks about opposite and hypotenuse Can use sine (sin) or cosecant (csc), but since your calculator has a key for sin, sine is more convenient. ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 58 6 32 10 Solving the Triangle x sin(32 ) 6 58 6 32 From your calculator, you can find that sin(32) 0.53, so x 0.53 6 x 32 . ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 11 Special Right Triangles 45 – 45 – 90 Triangle The legs are of equal length The length of the hypotenuse is 2 times the leg s 2 s 45° s 2 sin(45 ) 2 s 2 2 cos(45 ) 2 s 2 s s tan(45 ) 1 s s ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 12 Special Right Triangles 30 – 60 – 90 Triangle The side opposite the 30 angle is half the hypotenuse The side opposite the 60 angle is half the hypotenuse times 3 30° 1 2 h 1 sin(30 ) h 2 1 2 h 3 3 cos(30 ) h 2 1 2 h 3 tan(30 ) 1 3 h 3 2 ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 13 60° Special Right Triangles 30 – 60 – 90 Triangle The side opposite the 30 angle is half the hypotenuse The side opposite the 60 angle is half the hypotenuse times 3 1 2 h 3 3 sin(60 ) h 2 1 2 h 1 cos(60 ) h 2 tan(60 ) ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 1 2 h 3 1 2 h 3 14 Memory Work Know these values as well as you know your own name. sin cos tan 30° 1 2 3 2 3 3 45° 2 2 2 2 1 60° 3 2 1 2 ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 3 15 Non-Right Triangles All these relationships are based on the assumption that the triangle is a right triangle. It is possible, however, to use trigonometry to solve for unknown sides or angles in non-right triangles. ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 16 Law of Sines a b c sin( A) sin( B) sin(C) In geometry, you learned that the largest angle of a triangle was opposite the longest side, and the smallest angle opposite the shortest side. The Law of Sines says that the ratio of a side to the sine of the opposite angle is constant throughout the triangle. ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 17 Sample Problem In ABC, mA = 38, mB = 42, and BC = 12 cm. Find the length of side AC. Draw a diagram to see the position of the C given angles and side. BC is opposite A A You must find AC, the side opposite B. ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 18 B Sample Problem .... Find the length of side AC. Use the Law of Sines with mA = 38, mB = 42, and BC = 12 a b sin( A) sin( B) 12 b sin(38 ) sin(42 ) 12 sin(42 ) b sin(38 ) b g 12 sin(42 ) 12 .6691 b sin(38 ) .6157 b 13.041 ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 19 Warning The Law of Sines is useful when you know the sizes of two sides and one angle or two angles and one side. However, the results can be ambiguous if the given information is two sides and an angle other than the included angle (ssa). ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 20 Warning The Law of Sines gives a unique solution when the given information is sas asa Remember that these are all sufficient conditions for congruent triangles. aas The ambiguous case is ssa, which is not a way of proving triangles congruent. ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 21 Law of Cosines c a b 2ab cos(C) 2 2 2 If you apply the Law of Cosines to a right triangle, that extra term becomes zero, leaving just the Pythagorean Theorem. The Law of Cosines is most useful when you know the lengths of all three sides and need to find an angle, or when you two sides and the included angle. ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 22 Largest angle opposite longest side Sample Problem Triangle XYZ has sides of lengths 15, 22, and 35. Find the measure of the largest angle of the triangle. c 2 a 2 b 2 2ab cos(C) 22 15 35 35 15 22 2 15 22 cos(C) 2 2 2 1225 225 484 660 cos(C) 1225 709 660 cos(C) ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 23 Sample Problem ... Find the measure of the largest angle of the triangle. 516 660 cos(C ) 15 22 35 516 cos(C ) .7818 660 C cos1 ( .7818) 1414 . ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 24 Caution Many people, when they reach the line 1225 709 660 cos(C) will mistakenly subtract 660 from 709. Don’t be one of them. The multiplication should be done before any addition or subtraction. ©Carolyn C. Wheater, 2000 25