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VCE 11 General 2023

11.06 Sine rule

Lesson

Introduction

A right angled triangle with vertices A, B, and C with their opposite sides lengths lower case a, b, and c, respectively.

In right-angled triangles, trigonometric ratios are used to relate the sides and angles:

In this triangle, \sin A = \dfrac{a}{c} and \sin B = \dfrac{b}{c}.

These trigonometric ratios only apply to right-angled triangles. They do not work for other triangles where there are no right angles.

A triangle with vertices A, B, and C with their opposite sides lengths lower case a, b, and c, respectively.

However, there is a relationship between each of the three interior angles and their opposite side-lengths, defined by the sine rule.

Sine rule to find a side length

Triangle A B C with sides a, b, c, and angle C bisected by line x.

Let's start by drawing a line segment from the vertex C perpendicular to the edge c. The length of this segment is labelled as x.

Since x is perpendicular to c, the two line segments meet at right angles. This means that the triangle above has been divided into two right-angled triangles.

Using basic trigonometry, the relationships for the sines of the angles A and B is given by \sin A = \dfrac{x}{b} and \sin B = \dfrac{x}{a}.

Multiply the first equation by b and the second by a. This rearranges the sine ratios above so that x is the subject of both equations, x = b \sin A and x = a \sin B.

Equating these two equations eliminates the x, creating the following relationship between angles A and B, and side-lengths a and b. b \sin A = a \sin B

Dividing this last equation by the side lengths a & b gives the following important relationship: \dfrac{\sin A}{a} = \dfrac{\sin B}{b}

This process can be repeated to find how these two angles relate to c and C, and this gives us the sine rule (sometimes called the law of sines).

For a triangle with sides a, b, and c, with corresponding angles A,\,B, and C: \dfrac{\sin A}{a}=\dfrac{\sin B}{b}=\dfrac{\sin C}{c}.

The reciprocal of each fraction gives the alternate form: \dfrac{a}{\sin A}=\dfrac{b}{\sin B}=\dfrac{c}{\sin C}.

The sine rule shows that the lengths of the sides in a triangle are proportional to the sines of the angles opposite them.

Suppose we have the angles A and B and a known side length b (opposite to angle B). The sine rule can be used to calculate unknown side length a (opposite to angle A). Using the form of the sine rule with numerator lengths \dfrac{a}{\sin A}=\dfrac{b}{\sin B}, this equation can be transposed to make a the subject of the equation, by multiplying both sides by \sin A. This gives a=\dfrac{b\sin A}{\sin B}.

Examples

Example 1

Find the side length a using the sine rule. Round your answer to two decimal places.

A scalene triangle with side length 18  opposite an angle of 69 degrees, and side length a opposite an angle of 33 degrees.
Worked Solution
Create a strategy

Use the sine rule: \dfrac{a}{\sin A}=\dfrac{b}{\sin B}.

Apply the idea
\displaystyle \frac{a}{\sin 33\degree} \displaystyle =\displaystyle \frac{18}{\sin 69\degree }Substitute b=18, \, A=33, \, B=69
\displaystyle a\displaystyle =\displaystyle \frac{18}{\sin 69\degree} \times \sin 33\degreeMultiply both sides by \sin 33\degree
\displaystyle =\displaystyle 10.50Evaluate

Example 2

Consider the triangle with two interior angles C=72.53\degree and B=31.69\degree , and one side length a=5.816 metres.

Triangle with angles A B C with sides a, b, c.
a

Solve for the unknown interior angle A.

Worked Solution
Create a strategy

Subtract the given angles from 180\degree.

Apply the idea

Remember that the sum of the interior angles of a triangle is 180\degree. We are given two of the three angles of the triangle: B=31.69\degree and C=72.53\degree.

\displaystyle A+31.69\degree+72.53\degree\displaystyle =\displaystyle 180\degreeAdd all interior angles and equate to 180\degree
\displaystyle A+104.22\degree\displaystyle =\displaystyle 180\degreeEvaluate the left side
\displaystyle A\displaystyle =\displaystyle 75.78\degreeSubtract 104.22\degree from both sides
b

Solve for b. Round your answer to three decimal places.

Worked Solution
Create a strategy

Use the sine rule: \dfrac{b}{\sin B}=\dfrac{a}{\sin A}.

Apply the idea

We are given that a=5.816 and B=31.69\degree, and we found in part (a) that A=75.78\degree.

\displaystyle \dfrac{b}{\sin 31.69\degree}\displaystyle =\displaystyle \dfrac{5.816}{\sin 75.78\degree} Substitute the values
\displaystyle b\displaystyle =\displaystyle \dfrac{5.816 } {\sin 75.78\degree}\times\sin 31.69\degreeMultiply both sides by \sin 31.69\degree
\displaystyle =\displaystyle 3.152 \text{ m}Evaluate using your calculator
c

Solve for c. Round your answer to three decimal places.

Worked Solution
Create a strategy

Use the sine rule: \dfrac{c}{\sin C}=\dfrac{a}{\sin A}.

Apply the idea

We are given that a=5.816 and C=72.53\degree, and we found in part (a) that A=75.78\degree.

\displaystyle \dfrac{c}{\sin 72.53\degree}\displaystyle =\displaystyle \dfrac{5.816}{\sin 75.78\degree} Substitute the values
\displaystyle c\displaystyle =\displaystyle \dfrac{5.816} {\sin 75.78\degree} \times\sin 72.53\degreeMultiply both sides by \sin 72.53\degree
\displaystyle =\displaystyle 5.723 \text{ m}Evaluate using your calculator
Reflect and check

We can also use B=31.69\degree and C=72.53\degree, and we found in part (b) that b=3.152.

\displaystyle \dfrac{c}{\sin 72.53\degree}\displaystyle =\displaystyle \dfrac{3.152}{\sin 31.69\degree} Substitute the values
\displaystyle c\displaystyle =\displaystyle \dfrac{3.152 } {\sin 31.69\degree}\times\sin 72.53\degreeMultiply both sides by \sin 72.53\degree
\displaystyle =\displaystyle 5.723 \text{ m}Evaluate using your calculator

We can see that we still have the same answer as the sine rule states \dfrac{a}{\sin A}=\dfrac{b}{\sin B}=\dfrac{c}{\sin C}.

Idea summary

The sine rule shows that the lengths of the sides in a triangle are proportional to the sines of the angles opposite them.

The sine rule to find a side:

\displaystyle \dfrac{a}{\sin A}=\dfrac{b}{\sin B}=\dfrac{c}{\sin C}
\bm{A}
is the angle opposite side a
\bm{B}
is the angle opposite side b
\bm{C}
is the angle opposite side c

Sine rule to find an angle

Suppose we have the angles a and b, and the angle B (opposite side length b). The sine rule can be used to calculate unknown angle A (opposite side length a). Using the form of the sine rule with numerator lengths \dfrac{\sin A}{a}=\dfrac{\sin B}{b}, this equation can be transposed to make \sin A the subject of the equation, by multiplying both sides by a. This gives \sin A = \dfrac{a \sin B}{b}.

Finally, take the inverse sine of both sides of the equation to make A the subject, which gives A = \sin^{-1} \left( \dfrac{a \sin B}{b} \right).

Examples

Example 3

Find the value of the acute angle A using the Sine Rule. Write your answer in degrees to two decimal places.

A triangle with side length 98 opposite angle A and side length 81 opposite an angle of 50 degrees.
Worked Solution
Create a strategy

Use the sine rule: \dfrac{\sin A}{a}=\dfrac{\sin B}{b}.

Apply the idea
\displaystyle \dfrac{\sin A}{98}\displaystyle =\displaystyle \dfrac{\sin 50^\circ }{81}Substitute a=98, \, b=81, \, B=50\degree
\displaystyle \sin A\displaystyle =\displaystyle 98 \times\frac{\sin 50\degree }{81}Multiply both sides by 98
\displaystyle \sin A\displaystyle =\displaystyle 0.926\,819Evaluate
\displaystyle A\displaystyle =\displaystyle \sin ^{-1}\left(0.926\,819\right)Take the inverse sine of both sides
\displaystyle =\displaystyle 67.94\degreeEvaluate

Example 4

Find the value of the acute angle x using the sine rule. Round your answer to one decimal place.

Triangle A B C with angle of 56 degrees at A, angle of X at C, sides A B of 9 and B C of 17.
Worked Solution
Create a strategy

Use the sine rule: \dfrac{\sin C}{c}=\dfrac{\sin A}{a}

Apply the idea

We are given two of the three side lengths of the triangle: BC=a=17 and AB=c=9, and one angle, A=56\degree. We are solving for the angle, C=x .

\displaystyle \dfrac{\sin x}{9}\displaystyle =\displaystyle \dfrac{\sin 56\degree}{17} Substitute the values
\displaystyle \sin x\displaystyle =\displaystyle \dfrac{\sin 56\degree}{17} \times 9Multiply both sides by 9
\displaystyle \sin x\displaystyle =\displaystyle 0.4389Evaluate
\displaystyle x\displaystyle =\displaystyle \sin^{-1} \left(0.4389 \right)Take the inverse sine of both sides
\displaystyle =\displaystyle 26.0\degreeEvaluate
Idea summary

The sine rule to find an angle:

\displaystyle \dfrac{\sin A}{a}=\dfrac{\sin B}{b}=\dfrac{\sin C}{c}
\bm{A}
is the angle opposite side a
\bm{B}
is the angle opposite side b
\bm{C}
is the angle opposite side c

The ambiguous case

Sometimes when trying to find an unknown angle in a triangle, the sides of the triangle can be arranged in two different ways, to create either an obtuse angle or an acute angle. When this can occur, this is known as the ambiguous case of using the sine rule.

Exploration

Let's start by investigating this applet.

Set the value of the length of a (blue side), and the length of b (red side). Click "Show triangle" and move the point A to change the value of \angle CAB (blue angle). These represent the three known quantities - two lengths and an angle. The angle \angle ABC (red angle) is the value we find with the sine rule.

Click "Check for second triangle" to see if a second triangle can be made with the lengths a and b and \angle CAB . If we were to use the sine rule on this second triangle we would find the angle \angle AB\rq C (green angle).

What do you notice about the relationship between these two solutions (the red and green angles)?

Loading interactive...

When a \geq b, there is only one possible triangle, and only one possible value for the other angle.

When a \lt b, there are two possible triangles, and two possible values for the other angle which are supplementary.

There are two cases, and what separates one from the other is summarized in this table.

This is called the ambiguous case.

This can be seen algebraically by looking at the equation used before:B = \sin^{-1} \left( \dfrac{b \sin A}{a}\right).

In the  previous lesson  , it was seen that identical (positive) trigonometric ratios can be used to find both an acute angle solution and an obtuse angle solution. The two angles that create the same sine ratio are always supplementary, meaning that their sum is 180\degree.

A calculator will only ever give the acute angle solution and not the obtuse angle. However, since the two values of B that are produced (red and green angles) always add to 180\degree, this sum can be used to find the other obtuse angle. In summary:

When finding an angle using the sine rule (with two known sides and a known angle), use the following rule to find one value of B: \dfrac{\sin B}{b}=\dfrac{\sin A}{a}

B=\sin^{-1}\left(\dfrac{b\sin{A}}{a}\right)

If the side opposite the known angle is the shorter side, this is the ambiguous case, meaning the correct angle is either acute or obtuse. Subtract the first value of B from 180\degree to find the second solution.

Examples

Example 5

Find the value of x using the sine rule, noting that x is obtuse. Round your answer to two decimal places.

A triangle with side length 19 opposite an angle x and side length 14 opposite an angle of 28 degrees.
Worked Solution
Create a strategy

Use the sine rule: \dfrac{\sin A}{a}=\dfrac{\sin B}{b}.

Apply the idea
\displaystyle \dfrac{\sin x}{19}\displaystyle =\displaystyle \dfrac{\sin 28 \degree }{14}Substitute A=x, \,a=19, \, b=14, \, B=28
\displaystyle \sin x\displaystyle =\displaystyle 19 \times\frac{\sin 28\degree }{14}Multiply both sides by 19
\displaystyle \sin x\displaystyle =\displaystyle 0.637\,14Evaluate
\displaystyle x\displaystyle =\displaystyle \sin ^{-1}\left(0.637\,14\right)Take the inverse sine of both sides
\displaystyle =\displaystyle 39.58\degreeEvaluate

To find the obtuse angle x, we subtract the acute angle from 180\degree:

\displaystyle x\displaystyle =\displaystyle 180 - 39.58Subtract 39.58 from 180
\displaystyle =\displaystyle 140.42\degreeEvaluate

Example 6

Consider \triangle ABC below:

Triangle A B C with sides A B measures 30, B C measures 15 and angle B bisected by line B D, measures 15. All in centimetres.
a

Find x, noting that x is acute. Round your answer to the nearest degree.

Worked Solution
Create a strategy

Use the sine rule: \dfrac{\sin C}{c}=\dfrac{\sin A}{a}.

Apply the idea
\displaystyle \dfrac{\sin x}{30}\displaystyle =\displaystyle \dfrac{\sin 19 \degree }{15}Substitute C=x, \, c=30,\,A=19\degree, \,a=15
\displaystyle \sin x\displaystyle =\displaystyle 30 \times\frac{\sin 19\degree }{15}Multiply both sides by 30
\displaystyle \sin x\displaystyle =\displaystyle 0.651\,14Evaluate
\displaystyle x\displaystyle =\displaystyle \sin ^{-1}\left(0.651\,14\right)Take the inverse sine of both sides
\displaystyle =\displaystyle 41\degreeEvaluate
b

Now find \angle ADB to the nearest whole degree, given that \angle ADB \gt \angle ACB.

Worked Solution
Create a strategy

To find the obtuse angle x, we subtract the acute angle from 180\degree.

Apply the idea

In part (a), we found the acute angle, \angle ACB = 41\degree. We need to find the supplementary angle of it. So,

\displaystyle \angle ADB\displaystyle =\displaystyle 180 - 41Subtract 41 from 180
\displaystyle =\displaystyle 139\degreeEvaluate
Reflect and check

Notice that \triangle BCD is an isosceles triangle, which makes its base angles equal, \angle BCD = \angle BDC. So we can subtract \angle BDC=41\degree from 180\degree, to determine the angle, \angle ADB.

Example 7

Consider a triangle \triangle ABC such that \angle CAB is equal to 57\degree, and side a=10 and b=11.

Select the most appropriate option to complete the sentence below: The triangle:

A
Can be either acute or obtuse.
B
Does not exist.
C
Must be a right triangle.
D
Must be an obtuse triangle.
E
Must be an acute triangle.
Worked Solution
Create a strategy

Remember that if the side opposite the known angle is the shorter side, then we are in the ambiguous case.

Apply the idea

In \triangle ABC the opposite of the known angle \angle CAB = 57\degree is the side with length a=10.

This side length is shorter than the other known side, b=11, resulting in an ambiguous case with two possible triangles and two values for the other angle.

The most appropriate option is option A.

Idea summary

Sine rule (ambiguous case)

If you are trying to find an angle using the sine rule (with two known sides and a known angle), use the following rule to find one value of B:\dfrac{\sin B}{b}=\dfrac{\sin A}{a}

If the side opposite the known angle is the shorter side, you are in the ambiguous case. Subtract the first value of B that you found from 180 \degree to find the second solution.

Outcomes

U2.AoS4.4

the sine rule (including the ambiguous case) and the cosine rule

U2.AoS4.10

solve practical problems requiring the calculation of side lengths or angles in non-right-angled triangles using the sine rule or the cosine rule as appropriate

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