Title: Trigonometric Functions: Unit Circle Approach
1Trigonometric Functions Unit Circle Approach
2Trigonometric Functions
- Sine (?) opp/hyp cosecant ? hyp/opp
- Cosine (?) adj/hyp secant ? hyp/adj
- Tangent (?) opp/adj cotangent ? adj/opp
3Trigonometric Functions of 45?
- Sin (45) v(2)/2 csc 45 v2
- Cos (45) v(2)/2 sec 45 v2
- Tan (45) 1 cot 45 1
v2
45
1
45
1
4Trigonometric Functions of 30?
- Sin (30) ½ csc 30 2
- Cos (30) /2 sec 30 2 /3
- Tan (30) /3 cot 30
2
30
60
1
5Trigonometric Functions of 60?
- Sin (60) v3/2 csc 60 2 /3
- Cos (60) 1/2 sec 60 2
- Tan (60) v3 cot 60 /3
2
30
60
1
630, 45, and 60 degrees in Radians
- 30 degrees
- p/6 radians
- 45 degrees
- p/4 radians
- 60 degrees
- p/3 radians
7Trig Functions on the Calculator
- Make sure the mode is radian/degree depending on
your need. - Press mode
- Arrow down to radian/degree and hit enter on the
one wanted. - There are no buttons on the calculator for sec,
csc, or cot. - Use 1/(the appropriate trig) to get these.
- On the calculator, the cube of sec 30 needs to be
put in as (sec (30))3
8Trig Functions on the Calculator
9Unit CircleA circle of radius one whose center
is on the origin.
(0,1)
(1,0)
(-1,0)
(0,-1)
10Circle of Radius One
- Unit Circle
- Cos(angle) x-value
- Sin(angle)y-value
- If you have a circle with radius 1 and draw a
triangle within it, opposite over hypotenuse will
end up y-value over 1.
11Relationships between Angles in the Four
Quadrants in degrees
- Sin (180 ?) sin(?)
- Sin (135) sin (45)
- Cos (180 ?) -cos(?)
- Cos(135) -cos(45)
- Cos(?) cos(- ?)
- Cos(45 ) cos(-45)
- Cos(-135) cos(135)
- Sin(- ?) -sin(?)
- Sin(-45) -sin(45)
- Sin(-135) -sin(135)
Remember that clockwise 45 degrees ( or -45) is
the same as counterclockwise 315 degrees. Also
clockwise 135 degrees (or -135) is the same as
counterclockwise 225 degrees.
12Identities
- sin(180 - A) sin(A)
- cos(180 - A) -cos(A)
13Sine is Odd, Cosine is Even
- sin(-A) -sin(A)
- cos(-A) cos(A)
14Trig Functions of any Angle
- Standard Positionan angle whose vertex is at the
origin and the initial side lies along the
positive x-axis. - Coterminal AnglesAngles with the same initial
and terminal side, but different measures. - Example 90, 450, and -270 are all coterminal
- They are angles that differ by an integer
multiple of 360 degrees or an integer multiple of
2p radians.
15Circle of Radius One
- Unit Circle
- Cos(angle) x-value
- Sin(angle)y-value
- If you have a circle with radius 1 and draw a
triangle within it, opposite over hypotenuse will
end up y-value over 1.
16Trigonometric Functions of any Angle
- Find the six trig functions of a given angle.
- Draw the angle in standard position.
- Create the reference triangle. This triangle
must have the terminal side of the angle as its
hypotenuse, and the vertical side must be
perpendicular to and connect to the x-axis.
Think Bowtie. - Determine whether the triangle is a 30-60-90 or
45-45-90. - The values of the trig functions will equal those
in the first quadrant only the signs might change.
17The Bowtie
?
?
?
?
18What is positive where?
All
Sin(csc)
Tan(cot)
Cos (sec)
19What is positive where?
All
sin
tan
cos
20Quadrantal Angles
- Angles whose terminal sides lie along one of the
coordinate axis. - They do not produce reference triangles. Just
remember that x is the horizontal distance or
zero if there isnt one. Y is the vertical
distance, or zero if there isnt one. - X and Y are either 0,1, or -1.
21Quadrantal Angles in the Unit Circle
(0,1)
(1,0)
(-1,0)
(0,-1)
22In the Unit Circlet is any real number
- Sin t y
- Cos t x
- Tan t (sin t)/(cos t) y/x
- Csc t 1/y (y not 0)
- Sec t 1/x (x not 0)
- Cot t (cos t)/(sin t) x/y