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Published byClaire Atkins Modified over 9 years ago
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Angles and the Unit Circle
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An angle is in standard position when: 1) The vertex is at the origin. 2) One leg is on the positive x – axis. (This is the initial side.) 3) The second ray moves in the direction of the angle (This is the terminal side.)
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If the movement from the initial side to the terminal side of the angle is counterclockwise, then the angle measures positive. +135 °
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If the movement from the initial side to the terminal side of the angle is clockwise, then the angle measures negative. – 225 °
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–315 ° 240 ° –110 ° 1) 2)3)
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Two angles in standard position that have the same terminal side are coterminal angles. To find a coterminal angle between 0 ° and 360 ° either add or subtract 360 ° until you get the number that you want. Find the measure of an angle between 0 ° and 360 ° coterminal with each given angle: 4) 575 ° 215 ° 5) –356 ° 4 ° 6) –210 ° 150 ° 7) –180 ° 180 °
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The Unit Circle: 1) Is centered at the origin, 2) Has a radius of 1, 3) Has points that relate to periodic functions. Normally, the angle measurement is referred to as θ (theta). 1 1
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For all values using SOH, CAH, TOA the H value is always 1. We can use the Pythagorean Theorem to find the rest. cos θ is the x coordinate. sin θ is the y coordinate. Let’s find sin (60°) and cos (60°). On a 30-60-90 triangle the short side is ½ the hypotenuse. So, cos (60°) = ½. a 2 + b 2 = c 2 (½) 2 + b 2 = 1 2 ¼ + b 2 = 1 b 2 = ¾ b = √(¾) = √(3)/2 So, sin (60 ° ) = √(3)/2 1 ½ √3 2
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Continue to find the values on the Unit Circle Find cos 0° and sin 0° Find cos 30° and sin 30° Find cos 45° and sin 45° Find cos 90° and sin 90° 1 1 (1, 0) (0, 1) (½, √3 / 2 ) ( √2 / 2, √2 / 2 ) ( √3 / 2, ½)
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These patterns repeat for the right x and y values. The values can be either positive or negative based on the x and y axes. Use this information to fill in the worksheets with exact values
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Locate the Unit Circle diagram from before. 8)9) sin (–60°) = –√(3)/2 cos (–60°) = ½ sin (–60°) = –½ cos (–60°) = √(3)/2 10) –390° 11) –30°
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During this lesson we completed page 708 # 1 – 27 odd. For more practice, complete the even problems
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