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Trig Review Sheet

This document provides a brief review of trigonometry including: 1) Definitions of angles, trig functions, and their relationships to right triangles and circles. 2) Guidelines for remembering trig function values at special angles like 30°, 45°, 60° degrees. 3) Using reference angles to determine trig function values in all quadrants. 4) Properties of even and odd functions as they relate to trig functions.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
114 views2 pages

Trig Review Sheet

This document provides a brief review of trigonometry including: 1) Definitions of angles, trig functions, and their relationships to right triangles and circles. 2) Guidelines for remembering trig function values at special angles like 30°, 45°, 60° degrees. 3) Using reference angles to determine trig function values in all quadrants. 4) Properties of even and odd functions as they relate to trig functions.

Uploaded by

mayhew
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Brief Review of Trigonometry

1. (a) An angle is determined by rotating a ray about its endpoint.( counterclockwise rotation measures a positive
angle, clockwise rotation measures a negative angle.) Angles are measured by either degrees or radians. In Calculus,
radian measure is used. One degree(1°) is the measure of a positive angle formed by 1/360 of one complete
revolution and one radian is the measure of a positive angle which intercepts an arc S which is equal in length
to the radius r of the circle. Hence, a central angle of θ radians intercepts an arc of length θ times the radius.
Formula for arc length S = r θ where θ is measured in radians.
θ/2π
(b) The area of a circular sector is a fractional part (θ π) of the area of the circle (π
π r2 )
Hence A =( θ/2π π ) (π
π r2 ) = r2θ/ 2 for the area of a circular sector.

π) of the unit circle so that


(c) An angle of 1° subtends an arc which is 1/360 of the circumference ( 2π
π) radians = (π
1° = ( 1/360) (2π π,180) radians and 1 radian = (180/ππ) degrees.
Example 30° = 30 ( π/180 radians) = π/6 radians.

2. You must be able to find in exact form( no calculators)the trig functions for the special
and quadrantal angles measured in radians. Below are some guidelines for remembering these.
(a) The circular functions are defined on a unit circle as follows:
sin θ y
sin θ = y cos θ = x tan θ = = y
cos θ x
θ
1 1 1 1 1 x x
csc θ = = sec θ = = cot θ = =
sin θ y cos θ x tan θ y

By similar triangles we have the following definitions on a circle of radius r


and can relate this to the right triangle involved: r y
y opp x adj y opp
sin θ = = cos θ = = tan θ = = θ
r hyp r hyp x adj x
r hyp r hyp x adj
csc θ = = sec θ = = cot θ = =
y opp x adj y opp

(b) The triangles below from geometry can be used to remember the 2
π/6 rad), 45° ( π/4 rad), 60° ( π/3 rad)
values of the trig functions at 30°(π 1
2
Example : sin 30° = sin (ππ/6 radians) = opp/hyp = 1/2 1 π/4
tan 45° = tan ( π/4 radians) = opp/adj = 1/1 = 1 π/6 1
π/3 radians) = adj/hyp = 1/2
cos 60° = cos(π 3
(c) For angles which are multiples of π/6 , π/4, π/3 we use the concept of reference angles. The reference angle
( called α here ) is the acute angle formed by the terminal side of the given angle and the x-axis. The value for a
circular function of the given angle θ is the same in absolute value as the value of the circular function of the
reference angle. The sign of the circular function of the given angle is determined by the particular quadrant
in which the terminal side of the given angle lies. Since α will be an acute angle, we can use the triangles above.
Quadrant II Here α is the reference angle and α = π – θ
sin θ = ± sin α = + sin α π/3 = + sin π/3 = + 3 /2
sin 2π
cos θ = ± cos α = – cos α π/6 = – cos π/6 = – 3 /2
cos 5π
tan θ = ± tan α = – tan α π/4 = – tan π/4 = – 1/1 = 1
tan 3π

Quadrant III Here α is the reference angle α = θ – π


sin θ = ± sin α = – sin α π/6 = – sin π/6 = – 1 / 2
sin 7π
cos θ = ± cos α = – cos α cos 5ππ/4 = – cos π/4 = – 2 / 2
tan θ = ± tan α = + tan α tan 4ππ/3 = +tan π/3 = + 3 / 1 = 3

Quadrant IV Here α is the reference angle α = 2π π–θ


sin θ = ± sin α = – sin α sin 5 π/3 = – sin π/3 = – 3 / 2
cos θ = ± cos α = + cos α cos 11ππ/ 6 = + cos π/6 = + 3 / 2
tan θ = ± tan α = – tan α tan 7ππ/4 = – tan π/4 = – 1 / 1 = –1
3. For the quandrantal angles: 0, π/2, π, 3π
π/2, 2π
π, etc. the graphs are useful.

4. The trigonometric functions evaluated at the real number t are defined to have the same values as the corresponding
circular functions for an angle of t radians.
π – 2). Here t is 2 and the reference angle α is π–2 since π/2 ≤ 2 ≤ π
π–2)rad = + sin(π
Ex: sin 2 =sin(2 rad) =+ sin(π

5. (a) An even function has the property that f (–x) = f ( x ). The cosine function is even so cos (–x) = cos ( x ).
π π
Ex. cos (– ) = cos ( ) = 3 / 2
6 6

(b) An odd function has the property that f (– x ) = – f ( x ). The sine function is odd so sin ( – x) = – sin ( x)
π π
Ex. sin( – ) = – sin ( ) = – 3 / 2
3 3

6. With the guidelines above you should be able to evaluate the trig functions for the chart below without a calculator.

θ 0 π /6 π /4 π /3 π /2 2π
π /3 3π
π /4 5π
π /6 π 7π
π /6 5π
π /4 4π
π /3 3π
π /2 5π
π /3 7π
π /4 11π
π /6 π

sin θ
cos θ
tan θ

7. Trig identities that you must know: 8. Identities used less often
Pythagorean identities Double Angle identities Sums and differences
sin θ + cos θ = 1
2 2 sin 2 θ = 2 sin θ cos θ sin ( θ1 ± θ2 ) = sin θ1 cos θ2 ± sin θ2 cos θ1
tan θ + 1 = sec θ
2 2 cos 2 θ = cos2 θ – sin2 θ θ1 ± θ2 ) = cos θ1 cos θ2 m sin θ1 sin θ2
cos (θ
θ
1 + cos 2θ
cot2 θ + 1 = csc2 θ cos2 θ =
2
θ
1 – cos 2θ tan θ 1 ± tan θ 2
sin2 θ = θ1 ± θ2 ) =
tan (θ
2 1 m tan θ 1tan θ 2

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