Two Solutions for Trig Functions: An Intuitive Way

AI Thread Summary
When working with trigonometric functions and the Law of Sines, identifying when two solutions exist can be intuitive. If the angle opposite the shorter side is known, it can lead to two possible triangles, resulting in two angles for B. To find the second angle, one can subtract the known angle from 180 degrees. Understanding the relationships between side lengths and angles is crucial, as the Law of Sines indicates that two angles can share the same sine value. Mastery of these concepts requires practice and a broader perspective on triangle construction.
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when working with trig functions. is there a trick to knowing if there are 2 solutions while filling out a triangle without memorizing your sines and cosines. or do I need to be subtracting all numbers I get by 180 then sin/cos them to see if they have the same number? doing law of sines right now. I would like to make it intuitive somehow without chasing rabbits on every problem if there is a way. thanks I attempted to attach a pic of the problem.
using the law of sines I got C is 50 and B is 72. rounding to the tens place for simplicity. this is just independent study not for a class. but my issue is the answer has 2 answers. I understand why. but I am curious if there is a way to tell without plugging numbers in and trying.

thanks
 

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You need a problem statement - I cannot see where you get two answers if there is no question.
 
You can draw a single triangle if given the lengths of two sides and the angle opposite to the longer side. But given the angle opposite to the shorter side, you can draw two triangles. Try.

ehild
 
Hmmm... in the example, the angle opposite the shorter side is given.
There are two places that side a can connect to side c, giving two possible lengths for c - and two possible angles for C and B.
 
Simon Bridge said:
Hmmm... in the example, the angle opposite the shorter side is given.
There are two places that side a can connect to side c, giving two possible lengths for c - and two possible angles for C and B.

so what method should I use for finding the second set of angles? taking B and doing 180-b and that's my second possible angle for B??
 
You know know how to identify the situation where you'll get two possible answers.
Practice drawing out a few of these and see what the relationships are.

Per your example, c can be long, as drawn, or very short.
Have a look at the two possibilities for angle B. If one is ##\small \theta## then, yep, the other is ##\small 180-\theta##.
Once you have B, the triangle has only one solution.
 
now it seems like that was something I should have realized without help. I guess I need to think about it in a little broader sense before I throw in the towel and ask. thanks for the explanation.
 
It's easy to miss - most people don't think of constructing triangles - you normally just sketch them out.
 
ya I still have a bad habit of just drawing every triangle and marking it from left bottom point AbCaBc. and not drawing to scale. but I am still not a master of the relationships between the sides length and the angles without the math. guess that's why math requires so much practice.
 
  • #10
The Law of Sines states that a/b = sinα /sinβ, where α is the angle opposite to a and β is opposite to b. If a>b α>β.

If one angle is given, you get the sin of the other angle, sinβ= sinα b/a or sinα= sinβ a/b and there exist two angles between 0 and 180 ° with the same sine.

If the angle opposite to the longer side (a) is given the other angle must be smaller than it. It can be obtuse only if α was obtuse, but a triangle can not have two obtuse angles. So β must be an acute angle: there is only one angle with the given sinβ=sinα b/a If the angle β, opposite to the shorter side is given, α>β, sinα=sinβ a/b < 1, there are two possible angles with the same sine, one acute and the other obtuse; they are supplementary angles.

ehild
 
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