unit 3 precalc
how to find x in (0,pi) for cos(x/2)=cot(x)
(0,pi) is interval, so adjust the window X value. imput both equations into y= have to put (tan(x/2))-1 rather than tan-1(x/2) then solve and find intersection point
write 2pi/3 in degrees
(2pi/3)(180/pi) pi's cancel, left with 180(2/3) 120
angle of depression
---------------- \x \ \
law of sines ______ ambiguous cases, and law of cosines _______ ambiguous cases
1. has, meaning it can have 0,1,2 solutions 2. does not have, meaning it only ever has 1 solution
sin 30, 60, 45
1/2, rad3/2, 1/rad2 (rationalized- rad2/2)
tan 30, 60, 45
1/rad3, rad3/1, 1/1
write 135 in radians
135(pi/180) simplify to 3pi/4
triangles have a total of _____ degrees
180
to convert radian measure to degrees, multiply by
180/pi
what is 360 in radians
2pi
one degree = ______ minutes
60
one minute = _____ seconds
60
area of a sector
A=1/2r^2(theta) Theta is in RADIANS
area of triangle
Area= √s(s−a)(s−b)(s−c). s= (perimeter of triangle)/2
angle of depression facts
The angle of depression is always OUTSIDE the triangle. It is never inside the triangle. It is a downward angle from a horizontal line. the horizontal line in the angle of depression diagram is PARALLEL to the ground level.
angle of elevation facts
The angle of elevation is always measured from the ground up. It is an upward angle from a horizontal line. It is always inside the triangle
y=secx
VA at every zero of y=cosx
y=tanx
VA- cosx zeros, first at pi/r, then 3pi/2 {x|x=pi/2 +kpi, kEz}
y=cscx
VAs at zeros of sin
angle of elevation
\ \ \ \ x \ --------
cosine
adj/hyp
cotangent
adj/opp
the hypotinuse is
always positive
reference angles
always positive and always acute
cos-1/sin-1(ratio)
angle
sin/cos/tan ^-1 (ratio) =
angle
Law of Cosines
a²=b²+c²-2bcCosA b²=a²+c²-2acCosB c²=a²+b²-2abCosC
oscillation of sine and cosine graphs (this is a part of graph analysis)
basically the range, parent function is -1 and 1
decimal degree form
change DMS form back to a degree
steps to solve: find the exact vlaue of cos-1(-rad3/2)
cos-1(ratio)= angle finding the angle!!! find the triangle that would provide that ratio find the reference angle after that
x value
cosine
1/tan
cot
1/sin
csc
sine and cosine parent function domain and range
d- (-infinity,infinity) r- [-1,1]
when solving things like sin(33)=x, what mode on the calculator should you be in
degree
law of sines solved in which mode
degree mode
DMS form and notation
degrees (o), minutes ('), seconds (")
rationalizing trig ratios
don't do it
angle of depression and the angle of elevation are
equivalent
"solve the triangle" means
find all angles and sides
how to solve angle of depression/elevation
find its compliment or find the angle of elevation, calc should be in degree mode
how to solve- exact value of arcsin(-rad3/2)
find on unit circle where the ordered pair has sin value of -rad3/2 (which would be the y value), and figure out the corresponding reference angle, ANSWER IN RADIANS
how to put degrees into DMS form
given: 329.125 degrees 329^o + 0.125(60'/1^o) 329^o + 7.5' 329^o + 7' + 0.5(60"/1') 329^o 7' 30"
how to put DMS form into decimal degree form
given: 35^o 12' 7" 35^o + 12'(1^o/60') + 7"(1'/60")(1^o/60') 35^o + 12/60 + 7/60^2 35.202^o
csc and sec graphs
graph sin and cos with the transformations, remember the period is 2pi, then draw on the asymptotes (wherever theres a zero) and then draw the csc and sec graphs
secant
hyp/adj
cosecant
hyp/opp
identifying all angles coterminal with something
if you are given a trig value, remember all the possibilities to get that value given the trig values. for example, if you are given csc=-2, there are two possible ways you can get that value, using the unit circle, both negative. meaning you would have to have two separate coterminal equations.
how can two solutions occur
if you get a given angle, say 45, and you solve the sine and get an angle, say 70, you can add 45 and 70 (115) and subtract that from 180 to get the final angle (65). another method would be subtracting 70 from 180 (110), which would be the first angle, adding the given 45 and 110 together to find the final angle (25) IF EITHER SET OF ANGLES DON'T ADD UP TO 180- ONE SOLUTION
arcsin/cos/tan
inverse
why do you have to restrict inverse functions
it has to pass the VLT
"find the exact value of" sin4pi/3
just means find the refrence angle, determine if its 306090 or 454590 triangle, find respetive sides, then find the ratio
solve a triangle given two sides and an angle
law of cosine first to find the last side- c2 = a2 + b2 − 2ab cos(C) then use the law of sines to find the smaller of the other two angles- a/sin A = b/sin B = c/sin C then add up the triangles' angles and sub from 180 to find the final angle
how to find a side given an angle and two sides (SAS)
law of cosine- c2 = a2 + b2 − 2ab cos(C)
end behavior of sine and cosine graphs
limits do not exist
terminal side
line drawn off of x axis
find exact value of sin^-1(4/9), if it exists-- what is this asking
means what angle would one have to take the sin of in order to get 4/9, find the angle
sine x intercept
n(pi), nEZ
cosine x intercept
n(pi/2), nEZ
clockwise
negative
oblique triangles
not 90 degrees
initial side
on x axis
tangent
opp/adj, also sin/cos-- slope
sine
opp/hyp
cot and tan graphs
period of one, so when dividing by b to get period, divide pi/b tan- half graph negative, half graph positive, asymptotes at pi/2 for parent function, positive slope from left to right cot- entire graph positive, negative slope from left to right so shifts and such the same way as cos/sin (except period) shifts affect asymptotes too
what is 180 in radians
pi
to convert a degree measure to radians, multiply by
pi/180
counterclockwise
positive
reference angle rules/how to solve for reference angle
quadrant one: theta quadrant two: 180 (or pi) - theta quadrant three: theta - 180 (or pi) quadrant four: 360 (or 2pi) - theta
cos 30, 60, 45
rad3/2, 1/2, 1/rad2 (rationalized- rad2/2)
calculator mode when graphing
radian
what units do you include in problems without specified units
radians
cos/sin(angle)=
ratio
sin/cos/tan(angle) =
ratio
central angle is the same as the
reference angle
arc length
s=rtheta where r= radius , theta= central/reference angle
1/cos
sec
law of sines
sinA/a=sinB/b=sinC/c
y value
sine
sine starts up or down cosine starts up or down
sine starts down at origin cosine starts up at y=1
sine function is even or odd cosine function is even or odd
sine- even, symmetric to origin cosine- odd, symmetric to y axis
easy way to graph arcsin/cos/tan
switch x and y, physically turn paper, graph as a regular, non-inverse graph, then restrict it
coterminal angles
two angles in standard position that have the same terminal side
steps to finding the area of a sector
use a=(1/2)(r^2)(theta) 1. r^2 2. r^2/2 3. (r^2/2)(theta) just mult the coefficients 4. simplify
given ordered pair find six trig functions
x value is the initial side y value is the other side, terminal side found by Pythagorean theorem
equation of sine and cosine graphs
y= a sin/cos (bx+c)+d
what does each variable indicate in the equation if sine and cosine graphs
y= a sin/cos (bx+c)+d amplitude- |a| period- 2pi/|b| frequency- |b|/2pi or 1/period phase shift- -c/|b| vertical shift- d midline- y=d
also review every previous quizlet made for this unit as well as previous units (review questions are 10% of the test)
yikes
coterminal angle notation, including one positive and one negative angle
{theta| angle + 360 (or 2pi) k, kEz} angle + 360= positive angle - 360= negative