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Join The Student Room TodayBe part of the UK's largest and fastest growing student community. It's free to join and a lot of fun - Get inspired, express your ideas, interact and share Revision:Sin, Cos, TanFrom The Student RoomTSR Wiki > Study Help > Subjects and Revision > Revision Notes > Mathematics > Sine, Cosine and Tangent The sine, cosine and tangents of common angles:
Quadrants and the 'cast' ruleOn a set of axes, angles are measured anti-clockwise from the positive x-axis. So 30º would be drawn as follows:
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The angles which lie between 0º and 90º are said to lie in the first quadrant. The angles between 90º and 180º are in the second quadrant, angles between 180º and 270º are in the third quadrant and angles between 270º and 360º are in the fourth quadrant:
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In the first quadrant, the values for sin, cos and tan are positive. In the second quadrant, the values for sin are positive only. In the third quadrant, the values for tan are positive only. In the fourth quadrant, the values for cos are positive only. This can be summed up as follows:
Related anglesThe sines, cosines and tangents of some angles are equal to the sines, cosines and tangents of other angles. For example, cos(-30º) = cos(30º) and cos(30º) = cos(390º) . In the following diagrams, the sines, cosines and tangents of each of the shaded angles have the same magnitude (ø is the same angle in each diagram):
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For example, if ø is 30º, sin30º = 0.5 sin150º = 0.5 sin210º = -0.5 sin330º = -0.5 These angles are 'related angles' and their cosines and tangents will be related in a similar way. Note that the signs of the sines (/cosines/tangents) are found using the 'cast' rule.
Arcsin, arccos, arctanArcsin is another way of writing the inverse of sin, arccos means the inverse of cos and arctan means the inverse of tan. For example, arcsin(0.5) = 30º . However, although this is true, we also know that sin(150º) = 0.5 (using the idea of related angles and the 'cast rule'). If we continue moving round the 'unit circle' (the circle with radius 1 that we have been drawing angles on above), then we find that sin(390º) is also 0.5 . So we can write arcsin(0.5) = 30º, 150º, 390º, ...
Solving EquationsExampleSolve the equation sinø = 0.6428, for 0 < ø < 360º therefore ø = arcsin(0.6428) = 40º, 140º, 400º, ... but the question asks for solutions between 0 and 360º, so the answer is 40º and 140º .
Graphing sinø, cosø and tanøThe following are graphs of sinø, cosø and tanø:
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Points to note:
These graphs obey the usual laws of graph transformations.
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