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Finding An Angle in A Right Angled Triangle PDF

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
188 views

Finding An Angle in A Right Angled Triangle PDF

Uploaded by

Aung Hlaing Htut
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Finding an Angle in a Right Angled Triangle

Advanced

Angle from Any Two Sides


We can find an unknown angle in a right-angled triangle , as long as we know the lengths of two of its sides.

Example

The ladder leans against a wall as shown.

What is the angle between the ladder and the wall?

The answer is to use Sine, Cosine or Tangent !

But which one to use? We have a special phrase " SOHCAHTOA " to help us, and we use it like this:

Step 1: find the names of the two sides we know

Adjacent is adjacent to the angle,


use
Opposite is opposite the angle,
oten
p
and the longest side is the Hypotenuse. Hy Opposite
θ

Adjacent

Example: in our ladder example we know the length of:

the side Opposite the angle "x", which is 2.5

the longest side, called the Hypotenuse, which is 5


Step 2: now use the first letters of those two sides (Opposite and Hypotenuse) and the phrase
" SOHCAHTOA " to find which one of Sine, Cosine or Tangent to use:

SOH... Sine: sin(θ) = Opposite / Hypotenuse


...CAH... Cosine: cos(θ) = Adjacent / Hypotenuse
...TOA Tangent: tan(θ) = Opposite / Adjacent

In our example that is Opposite and Hypotenuse, and that gives us “SOHcahtoa”, which tells us we need
to use Sine.

Step 3: Put our values into the Sine equation:

Sin (x) = Opposite / Hypotenuse = 2.5 / 5 = 0.5

Step 4: Now solve that equation!

sin(x) = 0.5

Next (trust me for the moment) we can re-arrange that into this:

x = sin-1(0.5)

And then get our calculator, key in 0.5 and use the sin-1 button to get the answer:

x = 30°

And we have our answer!

But what is the meaning of sin-1 … ?

Well, the Sine function "sin" takes an angle and gives us the ratio "opposite/hypotenuse",

sin
Opposite
Angle Hypotenuse

sin -1
But sin-1 (called "inverse sine") goes the other way ...
... it takes the ratio "opposite/hypotenuse" and gives us an angle.

Example:

Sine Function: sin(30°) = 0.5

Inverse Sine Function: sin-1(0.5) = 30°

On the calculator press one of the following (depending


on your brand of calculator): either '2ndF sin' or 'shift sin'.

On your calculator, try using sin and sin-1 to see what results you get!

Also try cos and cos-1. And tan and tan-1.


Go on, have a try now.

Step By Step
These are the four steps we need to follow:

Step 1 Find which two sides we know – out of Opposite, Adjacent and Hypotenuse.

Step 2 Use SOHCAHTOA to decide which one of Sine, Cosine or Tangent to use in this question.

Step 3 For Sine calculate Opposite/Hypotenuse, for Cosine calculate Adjacent/Hypotenuse or for
Tangent calculate Opposite/Adjacent.

Step 4 Find the angle from your calculator, using one of sin-1, cos-1 or tan-1

Examples
Let’s look at a couple more examples:

Example
Find the angle of elevation of the plane from point A on the ground.

Step 1 The two sides we know are Opposite (300) and Adjacent (400).

Step 2 SOHCAHTOA tells us we must use Tangent.

Step 3 Calculate Opposite/Adjacent = 300/400 = 0.75

Step 4 Find the angle from your calculator using tan-1

Tan x° = opposite/adjacent = 300/400 = 0.75

tan-1 of 0.75 = 36.9° (correct to 1 decimal place)

Unless you’re told otherwise, angles are usually rounded to one place of decimals.

Example

Find the size of angle a°

Step 1 The two sides we know are Adjacent (6,750) and Hypotenuse (8,100).

Step 2 SOHCAHTOA tells us we must use Cosine.

Step 3 Calculate Adjacent / Hypotenuse = 6,750/8,100 = 0.8333

Step 4 Find the angle from your calculator using cos-1 of 0.8333:

cos a° = 6,750/8,100 = 0.8333

cos-1 of 0.8333 = 33.6° (to 1 decimal place)

 
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