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PLANE TRIGONOMETRY

PLANE TRIGONOMETRY is based on the fact of similar figures.

Figures are similar if they are equiangular and the sides that make the equal angles are
proportional.

For triangles to be similar, however, it is sufficient that they be equiangular. From that it follows:

Right triangles will be similar if an acute angle of one is equal to an acute angle of the
other.

In the right triangles ABC, DEF, if the acute angle at B is equal to the acute angle at E,
then those triangles will be similar. Therefore the sides that make the equal angles will be
proportional. If CA is half of AB, for example, then FD will also be half of DE.

Trigonometry and Right Triangles


First of all, think of a trigonometry function as you would any general function. That is, a
value goes in and a value comes out.
The names of the three primary trigonometry functions are:
sine
cosine
tangent
These are abbreviated this way:
sine.....sin
cosine.....cos
tangent.....tan
So, instead of writing f(x) , we will write:
sin(x)
cos(x)
tan(x)

Now, as usual, the input value is x. This input value usually represents an angle. For the
sine function, when the input value is 30 degrees, the output value is 0.5. We would write that
statement this way:
0.5 = sin(30 °)

The input value for these trigonometric functions is an angle. That angle could be
measured in degrees or radians. Here we will consider only input angles measured in degrees
from 0 degrees to 90 degrees.
The output value for these trigonometric functions is a pure number. That is, it has no unit.
Let’s see the angle A. Notice that the sides of the triangle are labeled appropriately
"opposite side" and "adjacent side" relative to angle A. The hypotenuse is not considered
opposite or adjacent to the angle A.
The value for the tangent of angle A is defined as the value that you get when you divide the
opposite side by the adjacent side. This can be written:
tan (A) = opposite / adjacent

Suppose we measure the lengths of the sides of this triangle. Here are some realistic values:

This would mean that:


tan(A) = opposite / adjacent = 4.00 cm / 6.00 cm = 0.6667
Indirect measurement.
Trigonometry is used typically to measure things that we cannot measure directly.

For example, to measure the height h of a flagpole, we could measure a distance of 100 feet from
its base. From that point P, we could then measure the angle required to sight the top. If that
angle (called the angle of elevation) turned out to be 37°, then

h
tan 37°=
100
100 × tan 37°=h
h =75.4 feet
Exercises:

1. From a boat we can see the light of a lighthouse with an angle of 24º. How far are we
from the shore if the lighthouse is 80 metres high?
2. Find the angle of the sun rays with the horizontal line so that a streetlight 10,7 metres
high casts a shadow of 3,6 metres.
3. At one particular moment, a tree casts a shadow 4,23 metres long. At the same time,
the shadow of a stick (1,20 metres high) measures 0,64 meters. Find the height of
the tree.

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