lola.bonane said:
Thanks. do you have any examples on how to find lengths and stuff? i mean if we already have the lengths, and we need to find the sin, then what is the point of sin and cos?
There are many physical applications, and just to name a few:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trigonometry#Applications_of_trigonometry"
But since you're only beginning the topic of trigonometry, there really aren't going to be any amazing discoveries to be had just yet.
from the sohcahtoa, you can see that tan\theta =\frac{opp}{hyp}
so let's say you are given a line y=mx (m being the gradient), this is a line passing through the origin.
But the gradient m is calculated by \frac{rise}{run} which is tan\theta
If you don't understand how this works, draw a line on the number plane passing through the origin (make it a positive gradient for simplicity) and then construct a line perpendicular to the x-axis touching the line. The rise is the y-value while the run is the x-value. Now \theta is the angle between the x-axis and the line.
Now, you can change y=mx into y=(tan\theta) x
And now you can find the angle that is made by the line for any positive gradient (later, this will extend onto negative gradients).
e.g. if the line makes an angle of 45
o with the x-axis, then tan45
o=1 so the gradient of the line is 1 (this one is common sense though).
if the line makes an angle of 60
o then tan60
o is \sqrt{3} so the gradient of the line is exactly \sqrt{3}
This of course, is just a basic start to the many more deeper applications of trigonometry.