I Units of trigonometric functions?

AI Thread Summary
Trigonometric functions like sine and cosine are dimensionless, meaning their outputs do not have units. When calculating values such as Sin(0.5), the result is a pure number derived from the ratio of side lengths in a right triangle. This ratio can be interpreted as a percentage, but it is important to note that percentages are typically understood as values between 0% and 100%. The tangent function, while also a ratio, can yield any real number, which complicates comparisons to percentages. Overall, trigonometric functions are best understood as ratios rather than having specific units of measurement.
John Greger
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If I take say Sin(0.5), what would the units of the output be?
What are the units of the trigonometric functions sinus, cosinus etc? If I take say Sin(0.5), what would the units of the output be?
 
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John Greger said:
Summary:: If I take say Sin(0.5), what would the units of the output be?

What are the units of the trigonometric functions sinus, cosinus etc? If I take say Sin(0.5), what would the units of the output be?
Why do you think they have any units?
 
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If I have a right angled triangle, what is ##\sin## of one angle in terms of the side lengths? What are the units of that expression?
 
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In addition to @Ibix's argument, the other common argument comes from looking at the series expansions, e.g. for ##\sin{x}##,$$\sin{x} = \sum_{n=0}^{\infty} u_n = \sum_{n=0}^{\infty} (-1)^n \frac{x^{2n+1}}{(2n+1)!}$$Take any two terms ##u_a## and ##u_b## where ##a \neq b##, then for dimensional homogeneity you require that ##[x]^{2a+1} = [x]^{2b+1}## but this is only satisfied when ##[x] = 1##.
 
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John Greger said:
Summary:: If I take say Sin(0.5), what would the units of the output be?

What are the units of the trigonometric functions sinus, cosinus etc? If I take say Sin(0.5), what would the units of the output be?
You could consider sines and cosines as percentages or ratios.
It is a comparison between the legths of one side and the hypotenuse.
Please, see:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percentage

"A percentage is a dimensionless number (pure number); it has no unit of measurement."
 
Lnewqban said:
You could consider sines and cosines as percentages or ratios.
It is a comparison between the legths of one side and the hypotenuse.
Please, see:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percentage

"A percentage is a dimensionless number (pure number); it has no unit of measurement."
Comparing trigonometric functions to percentage might be quite misleading, imho. And not applicable to tangent.
 
lomidrevo said:
not applicable to tangent.

Yes, it is: the tangent is the ratio of the lengths of the two legs (opposite to adjacent).
 
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No issue with ratios, in my post I was referring to percentage only. Let me explain more particularly what I meant ..

Tangent returns any value from ##-\infty## to ##\infty##, its codomain is any real number. Although you can define a mapping between real numbers and the typical interval of percentage from 0.0% to 100.0%, I don't see any added value by doing so. I admit, "not applicable" is not the best word I could have used.
For sine and cosine, the analogy with percentage makes little bit more sense, as their return real numbers between -1.0 and 1.0, but I would need to use negative percentage, ie. interval -100.0% to 100.0%.

I realize that theoretically the percentage can take any real number, but typically one think of it as a number between 0% and 100%. That is why I said it might be misleading. Personally I found this kind of analogies more confusing than clarifying.
 
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