In trigonometry, the law of sines (or sine law) is a statement about arbitrary triangles in the plane. If the sides of the triangle are a, b and c and the angles opposite those sides are A, B and C, then the law of sines states:
where R is the radius of the triangle's circumcircle. This formula is useful to compute the remaining sides of a triangle if two angles and a side are known, a common problem in the technique of triangulation. It can also be used when two sides and one of the non-enclosed angles are known; in this case, the formula may give two possible values for the enclosed angle. When this happens, often only one result will cause all angles to be less than 180°; in other cases, there are two valid solutions to the triangle (see the ambiguous case section of this article for further information).
It can be shown that:
where s is the semi-perimeter,
Given a general triangle ABC, the following conditions would need to be fulfilled for the case to be ambiguous:
Given all of the above premises are true, the angle B may be acute or obtuse; meaning, one of the following is true:
OR
It can be observed that:
Therefore:
and
Doing the same thing with the line drawn between angle A and side a will yield:
Full proof:
Make a triangle ABC with sides a, b, c and the γ angle at C. Make an axis through the center of b and another through the c side. Mark the point of intersection of the axis S. Draw a circle k with its center in S with the radius r = |SA| = |SB| = |SC| (the Circumcircle). Through the medial angle law, the angle at S is 2*γ.
Thus, it can be observed that:
or:
and then
Applying cyclic permutation:
Here is an example of how to solve a problem using the law of sines:
Given: side a = 10, side c = 7, and angle C = 30 degrees
Using the law of sines, we know that :
Plugging in the given values, we find that :
Simplifying, the sine of angle A is equal to 5/7, or approximately 0.714. Thus, angle A is equal to 45.58 degrees.
Or another example of how to solve a problem using the law of sines:
If two sides of the triangle are equal to R and the length of the third side, the chord, is given as 100' (30.48 m) and the angle C opposite to the chord is given in degrees, then angle A = angle B = : and
This is North American railroad surveying practice.
Синусова теорема | Sinová věta | Sinusrelation | Sinussatz | Teorema del seno | Loi des sinus | 사인 법칙 | Hukum sinus | Teorema dei seni | משפט הסינוסים | Sinusregel | 正弦定理 | Twierdzenie sinusów | Lei dos senos | Теорема синусов | Sinusni izrek | Синусна теорема | Sinilause | Sinussatsen | Sinüs teoremi | Теорема синусів | 正弦定理
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Law of sines".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world