Chapter 4- Trigonometric Functions
unit circle
A circle of radius 1 centered at the origin of a coordinate system.
periodic function
A function with values that repeat at regular intervals. There exists a positive real number c such that f(t+c)=f(t) for all values of t in the domain of f.
midline
A horizontal axis that is the reference line about which the graph of a sinusoidal function oscillates.
oblique triangles
A triangle that is not a right triangle.
circular function
A trigonometric function defined as a function of the real number system using the unit circle.
radian
A uit of angular measurement equal to 180 degrees/pi.
damped wave
A wave whose amplitude decreases, such as the graph of a damped trigonometric function.
quadrantal angle
An angle in standard position that has a terminal side that lies on one of the coordinate axes.
coterminal angles
Angles in standard position that have the same initial and terminal sides, but different measures.
sinusoid
Any transformation of a sine function. The general forms of sinusoidal functions are y = a sin (bx+c) + d and y = a cos (bx+c) + d, where a, b, c, and d are constants and neither a nor b is 0.
period
For a function y=f(t), the smallest positive number c for which f(t+c)=f(t).
vertical shift
For a sinusoidal function, a vertical translation that is the average of the maximum and minimum values of the function.
phase shift
For a sinusoidal function, the difference between the horizontal position of a function and that of an otherwise similar sinusoidal function.
frequency
For a sinusoidal function, the number of cycles the function completes in a one unit interval. The frequency is the reciprocal of the period.
amplitude
Half the distance between the maximum and minimum values of a sinusoidal function.
Law of Cosines
If triangle ABC has side lengths a, b, and c, For any triangle with sides of lengths a, b, and c, and with C the angle opposite the side with length c, c^2 = a^2 + b^2 - 2ab(CosC).
sector
In a circle, the region bounded by a central angle and its intercepted arc.
damping factor
In a damped trigonometric function of the form y = f(x) sin bx or y = f(x) cos bx, f(x) is the damping factor.
secant
In a right triangle with acute angle theta, the ratio comparing the length of the hypotenuse to the side adjacent to theta. It is the reciprocal of the cosine ratio.
cosecant
In a right triangle with acute angle theta, the ratio comparing the length of the hypotenuse to the side opposite of theta. It is the reciprocal of the sine ratio.
cosine
In a right triangle with acute angle theta, the ratio comparing the length of the side adjacent to theta and the hypotenuse.
cotangent
In a right triangle with acute angle theta, the ratio comparing the length of the side adjacent to theta and the side opposite theta. It is the reciprocal of the sine ratio. It is the reciprocal of the tangent ratio.
sine
In a right triangle with acute angle theta, the ratio comparing the length of the side opposite theta and the hypotenuse.
tangent
In a right triangle with acute angle theta, the ratio comparing the length of the side opposite theta and the side adjacent to theta.
standard position
In the coordinate plane, an angle positioned so that its vertex is at the origin and its initial side is along the positive x-axis.
trigonometric ratios
Ratios that are formed using the side measures of a right triangle and a reference angle theta.
reference angle
The acute angle formed by the terminal side of an angle in standard position and the x-axis.
angle of elevation
The angle formed by a horizontal line and an observer's line of sight to an object above.
angle of depression
The angle formed by a horizontal line and an observer's line of sight to an object below.
terminal side
The final position of a ray after rotation when forming an angle.
damped trigonometric function
The function formed when a sinusoidal function y = sin bx or y = cos bx is multiplied by another function y = f(x). A function of the form y = f(x) sin bx or y = f(x) cos bx.
inverse trigonometric function
The inverse sine of x or sin^-1 x, the inverse cosine of x or cos^-1 x, and the inverse tangent of x or tan^-1 x.
linear speed
The rate at which an object moves along a circular path.
angular speed
The rate at which the object rotates about a fixed point.
initial side
The starting position of a ray when forming an angle.
reciprocal function
Trigonometric functions that are reciprocals of each other.
trigonometric functions
sin, cos, tan, csc, sec, cot
Law of Sines
sinA/a=sinB/b=sinC/c