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哪里的炒菜锅好用又便宜 Unit Circle

Unit Circle

The "Unit Circle" is a circle with a radius of 1.

Being so simple, it is a great way to learn and talk about lengths and angles.

The center is put on a graph where the x axis and y axis cross, so we get this neat arrangement here.

Sine, Cosine and Tangent

Since the radius is 1, we can read sine, cosine and tangent just from the x and y coordinates.

What happens when the angle, θ, is 0°?

cos 0° = 1, sin 0° = 0 and tan 0° = 0

What happens when θ is 90°?

cos 90° = 0, sin 90° = 1 and tan 90° is undefined

Try It Yourself!

Play with the interactive Unit Circle below. See how different angles (in radians or degrees) affect sine, cosine and tangent:

../algebra/images/circle-triangle.js

Can you find an angle where sine and cosine are equal?

The "sides" can be positive or negative according to the rules of Cartesian coordinates. This makes the sine, cosine and tangent change between positive and negative values also.

Try the Interactive Unit Circle

Pythagoras

Pythagoras' Theorem says for a right angled triangle, the square of the long side equals the sum of the squares of the other two sides:

x2 + y2 = 12

But 12 is just 1, so:

x2 + y2 = 1   equation of the unit circle

Also, since x=cos and y=sin, we get:

(cos(θ))2 + (sin(θ))2 = 1 A useful identity

Important Angles: 30°, 45° and 60°

You should try to remember sin, cos and tan for the angles 30°, 45° and 60°.

Yes, yes, it is a pain to he to remember things, but it will make life easier when you know them, not just in exams, but other times when you need to do quick estimates, and so on.

These are the values you should remember!

Angle Cos Sin Tan=Sin/Cos 30° √32 12 1 √3 = √3 3 45° √22 √22 1 60° 12 √32 √3 How To Remember?

To help you remember, cos goes "3,2,1"

cos(30°) = √32

cos(45°) = √22

cos(60°) = √12 = 12

And, sin goes "1,2,3" :

sin(30°) = √12 = 12 (because √1 = 1)

sin(45°) = √22

sin(60°) = √32

Just 3 Numbers

In fact, knowing 3 numbers is enough: 12 , √22 and √32

Because they work for both cos and sin:

Your hand can help you remember:

For example there are 3 fingers above 30°, so cos(30°) = √32

What about tan?

Well, tan = sin/cos, so we can calculate it like this:

tan(30°) = sin(30°)cos(30°) = 1/2√3/2 = 1√3 = √33 *

tan(45°) = sin(45°)cos(45°) = √2/2√2/2 = 1

tan(60°) = sin(60°)cos(60°) = √3/21/2 = √3

* Note: writing 1√3 may cost you marks so use √33 instead (see Rational Denominators to learn more).

Quick Sketch

Another way to help you remember 30° and 60° is to make a quick sketch:

Draw a triangle with side lengths of 2  

Cut in half. Pythagoras says the new side is √3

a2 + b2 = c2 12 + (√3)2 = 22 1 + 3 = 4     Then use sohcahtoa for sin, cos or tan   Example: sin(30°)

Sine: sohcahtoa

sine is opposite divided by hypotenuse sin(30°) = opposite hypotenuse = 1 2

The Whole Circle

For the whole circle we need values in every quadrant, with the correct plus or minus sign as per Cartesian Coordinates:

Note that cos is first and sin is second, so it goes (cos, sin):

Se as PDF

Example: What is cos(330°) ?

Make a sketch like this, and we can see it is the "long" value: √32

And this is the same Unit Circle in radians.

Example: What is sin(7π/6) ?

Think "7π/6 = π + π/6", then make a sketch.

We can then see it is negative and is the "short" value: −½

7708, 7709, 7710, 7711, 8903, 8904, 8906, 8907, 8905, 8908 Footnote: where do the values come from?

We can use the equation x2 + y2 = 1 to find the lengths of x and y (which are equal to cos and sin when the radius is 1):

45 Degrees

For 45 degrees, x and y are equal, so y=x:

x2 + x2 = 1 2x2 = 1 x2 = ½ x = y = √(½)

60 Degrees

Take an equilateral triangle (all sides are equal and all angles are 60°) and split it down the middle.

The "x" side is now ½,

And the "y" side is:

(½)2 + y2 = 1 ¼ + y2 = 1 y2 = 1 − ¼ = ¾ y = √(¾) 30 Degrees

30° is just 60° with x and y swapped, so x = √(¾) and y = ½

And:

√1/2 = √2/4 = √2√4 = √22

Also:

√3/4 = √3√4 = √32

And here is the result (same as before):

Angle Cos Sin Tan=Sin/Cos 30° √32 12 1 √3 = √3 3 45° √22 √22 1 60° 12 √32 √3 Circle Interactive Unit Circle Sine, Cosine and Tangent in Four Quadrants Trigonometry Index

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