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Trigonometric Ratios

Trigonometric Ratios

Trigonometry connects the angles of a triangle to the lengths of its sides. In a right triangle, the three basic trigonometric ratios—sine, cosine, and tangent—relate an acute angle to the ratio of two specific side lengths.

Before writing the ratios, we need to label the three sides of a right triangle relative to a specific acute angle, let's call it θ\theta:

  • Hypotenuse: The longest side, always opposite the 9090^\circ right angle.
  • Opposite: The side directly across from the angle θ\theta.
  • Adjacent: The side next to the angle θ\theta that is not the hypotenuse.

The Three Basic Ratios (SOH CAH TOA)

A standard memory trick for these fundamental ratios is SOH CAH TOA:

  • SOH: sinθ=OppositeHypotenuse\sin \theta = \frac{\text{Opposite}}{\text{Hypotenuse}}
  • CAH: cosθ=AdjacentHypotenuse\cos \theta = \frac{\text{Adjacent}}{\text{Hypotenuse}}
  • TOA: tanθ=OppositeAdjacent\tan \theta = \frac{\text{Opposite}}{\text{Adjacent}}

These ratios allow you to find unknown side lengths or acute angle measures, but they apply only to the acute angles inside a right triangle.

Example 1: Finding Ratios from Side Lengths

Problem: In a right triangle with a hypotenuse of 1313 and one leg of 55, find sinθ\sin \theta, cosθ\cos \theta, and tanθ\tan \theta for the angle opposite the leg of length 55.

Solution: First, we need to find the missing side (the adjacent leg) using the Pythagorean theorem (a2+b2=c2a^2 + b^2 = c^2): 52+b2=1325^2 + b^2 = 13^2 25+b2=169    b2=144    b=1225 + b^2 = 169 \implies b^2 = 144 \implies b = 12

Now, identify the sides relative to angle θ\theta:

  • Opposite = 55
  • Adjacent = 1212
  • Hypotenuse = 1313

Using SOH CAH TOA, we can write the ratios:

  • sinθ=OppositeHypotenuse=513\sin \theta = \frac{\text{Opposite}}{\text{Hypotenuse}} = \frac{5}{13}
  • cosθ=AdjacentHypotenuse=1213\cos \theta = \frac{\text{Adjacent}}{\text{Hypotenuse}} = \frac{12}{13}
  • tanθ=OppositeAdjacent=512\tan \theta = \frac{\text{Opposite}}{\text{Adjacent}} = \frac{5}{12}

Example 2: Finding Ratios from Another Ratio

Problem: If sinA=35\sin A = \frac{3}{5}, find cosA\cos A and tanA\tan A.

Solution: Since sinA=OppositeHypotenuse\sin A = \frac{\text{Opposite}}{\text{Hypotenuse}}, we can sketch a right triangle where the side opposite to angle AA is 33 and the hypotenuse is 55.

Find the adjacent side using the Pythagorean theorem: a2+32=52a^2 + 3^2 = 5^2 a2+9=25    a2=16    a=4a^2 + 9 = 25 \implies a^2 = 16 \implies a = 4

So, the adjacent side is 44. Now, write the remaining ratios using the side lengths 33, 44, and 55:

  • cosA=AdjacentHypotenuse=45\cos A = \frac{\text{Adjacent}}{\text{Hypotenuse}} = \frac{4}{5}
  • tanA=OppositeAdjacent=34\tan A = \frac{\text{Opposite}}{\text{Adjacent}} = \frac{3}{4}