Doubt about trigonometry Identities from sin α

AI Thread Summary
To solve the trigonometry exercise with sin α = √3/2, the sine function indicates that the opposite side is √3 and the hypotenuse is 2. This can be confirmed using the sine formula: sin(α) = opposite/hypotenuse. Additionally, considering the unit circle is important, as it shows that sine is positive in two quadrants, leading to two possible angles for α. Therefore, the next steps involve calculating the adjacent side using the Pythagorean theorem and determining the cosine and tangent values based on the identified sides.
Ray9927
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Hi all! I'm Ray and I'm new to this community, it's a pleasure!

I'm trying to resolve a trigonometry exercise where I have to calculate the trigonometry Identities of a right triangle but in the specifications they don't show me any common data (hypotenuse or cathethus values), they just leave me a sen α= √3/ 2

I know how to calculate the identities parting from the main two values, maybe the hypotenuse and one of the cathethus, then using the The Pythagorean Theorem to isolate the remaining variable, and finally reflecting the values in the identities formules (sen, cos, tan...) to finish the excercise but, this is completely new for me...

What should I do to proceed with this type of excercise? should I use the sen formule: Opposite/ hypotenuse with √3/ 2 to obtain the first values? i mean √3= Opposite and 2= hypotenuse?
 
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Ray9927 said:
Hi all! I'm Ray and I'm new to this community, it's a pleasure!

I'm trying to resolve a trigonometry exercise where I have to calculate the trigonometry Identities of a right triangle but in the specifications they don't show me any common data (hypotenuse or cathethus values), they just leave me a sen α= √3/ 2

I know how to calculate the identities parting from the main two values, maybe the hypotenuse and one of the cathethus, then using the The Pythagorean Theorem to isolate the remaining variable, and finally reflecting the values in the identities formules (sen, cos, tan...) to finish the excercise but, this is completely new for me...

What should I do to proceed with this type of excercise? should I use the sen formule: Opposite/ hypotenuse with √3/ 2 to obtain the first values? i mean √3= Opposite and 2= hypotenuse?
Trig functions are usually developed for the unit circle:


http://www.regentsprep.org/regents/math/algtrig/att5/unitcircle.gif

The sine and cosine functions have maximum amplitude of 1, so the unit circle works fine for these types of calculations.

In the circle above, sin (θ) = y and cos (θ) = x and the Pythagorean relation is x2 + y2 = 1
 
Ray9927 said:
Hi all! I'm Ray and I'm new to this community, it's a pleasure!

I'm trying to resolve a trigonometry exercise where I have to calculate the trigonometry Identities of a right triangle but in the specifications they don't show me any common data (hypotenuse or cathethus values), they just leave me a sen α= √3/ 2

I know how to calculate the identities parting from the main two values, maybe the hypotenuse and one of the cathethus, then using the The Pythagorean Theorem to isolate the remaining variable, and finally reflecting the values in the identities formules (sen, cos, tan...) to finish the excercise but, this is completely new for me...

What should I do to proceed with this type of excercise? should I use the sen formule: Opposite/ hypotenuse with √3/ 2 to obtain the first values? i mean √3= Opposite and 2= hypotenuse?

Well, yes. But I would think about the unit circle and realize there are two quadrants where the sine function is positive. So you get two different angles and then you can add ##\pm 2\pi## to each.

[Edit] I see SteamKing posted while I was still editing...
 
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