Any point other than the origin in the coordinate plane can be described by an angle in standard position and a distance from the origin.
A trigonometric ratio is a relationship between an angle and a pair of sides in a right triangle. For the triangle formed by angle \theta above, we have:
We can also rearrange these ratios to get x=r\cos\theta and y=r\sin\theta. In this way, we can describe any point on the coordinate plane by an angle \theta and a distance r by\left(x,y\right)=\left(r\cos\theta,r\sin\theta\right)where \theta is the angle of the point in standard form.
For any fixed value of r, varying the size of \theta from 0\degree to 360\degree describes a circle centered at the origin with radius r. The set of points that are obtained by r = 1 are known as the unit circle.
Each angle has a reference angle, which is the acute angle formed by the terminal side of the initial angle and the x-axis. The measure of a reference angle for angle \theta can be calculated in the different quadrants as follows:
\text{Quadrant} | \text{Reference angle } (\theta \gt 0\degree) | \text{Reference angle } (\theta \lt 0\degree) |
---|---|---|
\text{I} | \theta | 360\degree-|\theta| |
\text{II} | 180\degree-\theta | |\theta|-180\degree |
\text{III} | \theta-180\degree | 180\degree-|\theta| |
\text{IV} | 360\degree-\theta | |\theta| |
Every angle has many equivalent representations in the coordinate plane. These are known as coterminal angles.
Coterminal angles are formed by one or more rotations of 360 \degree either clockwise or counter-clockwise from the initial angle.
Consider the angle \theta = 210 \degree.
Sketch the angle on the coordinate plane.
Find the measure of the reference angle.
Find another coterminal angle.
Consider the point on the graph that has coordinates \left(8, 15\right).
Find r, the distance from the point to the origin.
Find \sin \theta.
Find \cos \theta.
Find \tan \theta.
The graph shows an angle \theta in standard position with its terminal side intersecting the unit circle at P\left(-\dfrac{12}{37},\dfrac{35}{37}\right).
Find \sin \theta.
Find \cos \theta.
Find \tan \theta.
Suppose that \sin \theta = -\dfrac{6}{7}, where 270 \degree < \theta < 360 \degree.
Find \cos \theta.
Find \tan \theta.