We know how to find the area of right-angled triangles - we just multiply the two short sides together, and halve the result:
The area of this triangle is $\frac{1}{2}ab$12ab, half the area of the rectangle.
If the triangle is not right-angled we can still find the area, as long as we know two sides and the angle between them:
The area of this triangle is the base $a$a times the height, and then halved, just like for right-angled triangles. But what is the height? It isn't $b$b in this case, but we can use $b$b and the angle $C$C to find it.
Here we have made a small right-angled triangle within our larger triangle, with hypotenuse $b$b and short side $h$h, the height of our large triangle. According to our trigonometric ratios from 3.02, the value of $\sin C$sinC is the opposite side, $h$h, divided by the hypotenuse, $b$b. This means the height $h$h is equal to $b\sin C$bsinC, and putting this all together we now have a formula for the area of any triangle!
If a triangle has sides of length $a$a and $b$b, and the angle between these sides is $C$C, then
$\text{Area }=\frac{1}{2}ab\sin C$Area =12absinC
Calculate the area of the following triangle.
Round your answer to two decimal places.
The diagram shows a triangular paddock with measurements as shown.
Find the area.
Round your answer to the nearest square metre.
What is the area in hectares?
Round your answer to two decimal places.
$\triangle ABC$△ABC has an area of $520$520 cm2. The side $BC=48$BC=48 cm and $\angle ACB=35^\circ$∠ACB=35°.
What is the length of $b$b?
Round your answer to the nearest centimetre.