Math, asked by eg154840, 3 months ago

How do you find cosine of beta when sin beta equals -5/6 and cosine beta is greater than 0

Answers

Answered by s14708bnabojyoti1935
0

Answer:

List the values of sin(α), cos(α), sin(β), and tan(β) for the triangle below, accurate to three decimal places:

right triangle, (alpha) at lower left, (beta) at upper right, hypotenuse 9.7, base 7.2, height 6.5

For either angle, the hypotenuse has length 9.7. For the angle α, "opposite" is 6.5 and "adjacent" is 7.2, so the sine of α will be "opposite over hypotenuse", or 6.5/9.7 = 0.6701030928...; and the cosine of α will be "adjacent over hypotenuse", or 7.2/9.7 = 0.7422680412.... For the angle β, "opposite" is 7.2 and "adjacent" is 6.5, so the sine of β will be 7.2/9.7 = 0.7422680412... and the tangent of β will be "opposite over adjacent", or 7.2/6.5 = 1.107692308.... Rounding to three decimal places, I get:

sin(α) = 0.670, cos(α) = 0.742, sin(β) = 0.742, tan(β) = 1.108

Once you've memorized the trig ratios, you can start using them to find other values. You'll likely need to use a calculator. If your calculator does not have keys or menu options with "SIN", "COS", and "TAN", then now is the time to upgrade! Make sure you know how to use the calculator, too; the owners manual should have clear instructions.

In the triangle shown below, find the value of x, accurate to three decimal places.

right triangle, base angle 20*, opposite / height 65, hypotenuse x

They've given me an angle measure and the length of the side "opposite" this angle, and have asked me for the length of the hypotenuse. The sine ratio is "opposite over hypotenuse", so I can turn what they've given me into an equation:

sin(20°) = 65/x

x = 65/sin(20°) Copyright © Elizabeth Stapel 2010-2011 All Rights Reserved

I have to plug this into my calculator to get the value of x: x = 190.047286...

x = 190.047

Note: If your calculator displayed a value of 71.19813587..., then check the "mode": your calculator is set to "radians" rather than to "degrees". You'll learn about radians later.

For the triangle shown, find the value of y, accurate to four decimal places.

They've given me an angle, a value for "adjacent", and a variable for "opposite", so I can form an equation:

tan(55.3°) = y/10

10tan(55.3°) = y

Plugging this into my calculator, I get y = 14.44183406....

y = 14.4418

right triangle with base angle 55.3*, base 10, height y

Find the angles indicated by the letters in the diagram. Give each answer correct to the nearest whole number.

At first, this looks fairly intimidating. But then I notice that, to find the length of the height r, I can use the base angle 30° and the full base length of 60, because r/60 is "opposite" over "adjacent", which is the tangent.

right triangle with height r, base 60, base angle 30*, with line from peak to base forming 55* angle, nested triangle with base s

r/60 = tan(30°)

r = 60tan(30°) = 34.64101615...

I'm supposed to the nearest whole number, so r = 35.

Now that I have the value of r, I can use r and the other base angle, 55°, to find the length of the other base, s, by using r/s = tan(55°):

35/s = tan(55°)

35/tan(55°) = s = 24.50726384...

r = 35, s = 25

Note: Since the sine and cosine ratios involve dividing a leg (one of the shorter two sides) by the hypotenuse, the values will never be more than 1, because (some number) / (a bigger number) from a right triangle is always going to be smaller than 1. But you can have really wide and short or really tall and skinny right triangles, so "opposite" and "adjacent" can have very different values. This tells you that the tangent ratio, being (opposite) / (adjacent), can have very large and very small values, depending on the triangle.

Similar questions