Values for sec, tan, cot cos 330 degrees w/o decimals, calc

mathmarauder

Junior Member
Joined
Oct 25, 2008
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Ok im instructed to find the value of the following, without using decimals and without a calculator.
cos 330 degrees
so i am tempted to just answer the question by calling it 11pi/6
I know thats too easy....so what are they looking for here?
 
Re: Values for sec, tan, cot cos

330 degrees is 30 degrees less than 360 degrees. It seems to me that a 30-60 degree right triangle might be involved. And if I remember correctly, the sides of the triangle are in known ratios.
 
Re: Values for sec, tan, cot cos

Ok, it is not asking me to draw a triangle though.
I understand what you mean though.
a 3-60- degree right triangle would be 30,60 and 90 degrees....
but unsure how to obtain the "value" of cos 330 degrees.
 
Re: Values for sec, tan, cot cos

Ok im instructed to find the value of the following, without using decimals and without a calculator.
cos 330 degrees
so i am tempted to just answer the question by calling it 11pi/6
I know thats too easy....so what are they looking for here?

All these trig functions are ratios of one side of a triangle to another. You know that 330 is in the 4th quadrant, so start by drawing a triangle in the 4th quadrant. The hypotenuse of the triangle is along the 330 degree line. From some point on the 330 degree line, draw a line perpendicular to the x axis (never to the y axis). That completes our triangle.

So, what kind of triangle is it? What are the angles? Obviously, it’s a 30-60-90 triangle.

We know the ratio of the sides for this triangle (or at least we’re expected to know). Label the short side (the one opposite the 30 degree angle) as “x”. The hypotenuse is twice as long as the short side, so label it “2x”. The other leg (the one along the x axis) is x(3)^.5 (that’s x times the square root of 3).

You also know that cosine of an angle is the ratio of the adjacent side to the hypotenuse, so we use that info to give our final answer.

So to summarize:

1) Figure out which quadrant you’re in.
2) Draw a triangle in that quadrant.
3) Figure out what kind of triangle it is (what the angles are).
4) Label the lengths of all the sides.
5) Find the requested ratio.
 
Re: Values for sec, tan, cot cos

ok so I have been working on this problem...still and
cos 330 degrees
i made the triangle n the 4th quadrant
I now have all three of the angles of the triangle 30,60 90 simple enough
now labelling the lengths of the sides... i dont know the lngths,
the only info about the problem was... find the value of cos 330 degrees
and the requested ratio....i dont know what to do with that
with the information here i provided, how do i find the
value of cos 330 degrees?
They do not seem to be asking for the 6 functions values...it seems they
are only asking for the value of cos 330 degrees.
so im unsure what the answer is
 
Re: Values for sec, tan, cot cos

mathmarauder said:
ok so I have been working on this problem...still and
cos 330 degrees
i made the triangle n the 4th quadrant
I now have all three of the angles of the triangle 30,60 90 simple enough
now labelling the lengths of the sides... i dont know the lngths,
the only info about the problem was... find the value of cos 330 degrees
and the requested ratio....i dont know what to do with that
with the information here i provided, how do i find the
value of cos 330 degrees?
They do not seem to be asking for the 6 functions values...it seems they
are only asking for the value of cos 330 degrees.
so im unsure what the answer is

Related to one of your earlier questions...the reference angle here is (360 degrees - 330 degrees) or 30 degrees.

The numerical values of all of the functions of 330 degrees are the same as those for an an angle of 30 degrees, except that the SIGN of the particular function is determined by the quadrant the angle terminates in.

You are EXPECTED TO KNOW the functions of an angle in one of the special right triangles (30-60-90 or 45-45-90). You are also expected to know that in quadrant IV, cos and sec are positive, and all of the other functions are negative.

cos 330 degrees = cos 30 degrees

NOW...dust off your 30-60-90 triangle diagram and have at it.

No calculator required...no decimals required either.
 
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