Law of Sines and Cosines
Law of Sines and Cosines
Law of Sines and Cosines
Law of Sines
and
Law of Cosines
An oblique triangle is a triangle that has no right angles.
b a
A c B
a c
4. Two sides and their included angle (SAS) B
a
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The first two cases can be solved using the Law of Sines. (The last
two cases can be solved using the Law of Cosines.)
Law of Sines
If ABC is an oblique triangle with sides a, b, and c, then
C C
b a a
h h b
A B B
c A c
Acute Triangle Obtuse Triangle
c B
A
Use the Law of Sines to find side b and c.
a = b a = c
sin A sin B sin A sin C
4.5 = b 4.5 = c
sin 110� sin 60� sin 110� sin 10�
b �4.15 feet c �0.83 feet
One solution: a b
Figure 6.5
Example 3 – Solution cont’d
• Multiply each side by b
Simplify.
Example (SSA):
Use the Law of Sines to solve the triangle.
A = 110, a = 125 inches, b = 100 inches C
a = 125 in
a = b b = 100 in
sin A sin B 110
125 = 100 c B
A
sin 110� sin B
a = c
B �48.74� sin A sin C
125 = c
C 180 – 110 – 48.74
sin 110� sin 21.26�
= 21.26 c �48.23 inches
Since the “given angle is already obtuse, there will only be one
triangle.
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Example (SSA):
Use the Law of Sines to solve the triangle.
A = 76, a = 18 inches, b = 20 inches
a = b C
sin A sin B
b = 20 in
18 = 20 a = 18 in
sin 76� sin B
76
sin B �1.078 A
B
There is no angle whose sine is 1.078.
a = 11.4 cm b = 12.8 cm
B2 180 – 72.2 = 107.8
72.2 58
C 180 – 58 – 107.8 = 14.2 B1 c A
10.3 cm
c = b C
sin C sin B
c = 12.8 b = 12.8 cm
sin 14.2� sin 72.2� a = 11.4 cm
58
c �3.3 A
B2 c
a = b + c - 2bc cos A
2 2 2
cos A = b 2
+ c 2
- a 2
2bc
b = a + c - 2ac cos B
2 2 2
cos B = a 2
+ c 2
- b 2
2ac
c = a + b - 2ab cos C
2 2 2
6 8
A B
12
Find the angle
opposite the longest
side first.
C �117.3�
12
Law of Sines: sin 117. = 6 B �26.4�
3� sin B