Plane and spherical trigonometry, and surveying

planeandspheeical trigonometry, and surveying by g.a.wentworth,a.m.,^ pbofebsorofje^^maticsinphillipsexeteracadejttt. 2ceacl)ers*letiitton* bostoncoll...

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eHC^ 1

WENTWORTH'S SERIES OF MATHEMATICS First

Steps

in

Number.

Primary Arithmetic.

Grammar School Arithmetic High School Arithmetic. Exercises

in

Arithmetic.

Shorter Course

in

Algebra.

Elements of Algebra.

Complete Algebra.

College Algebra.

Exercises

in

Algebra.

Plane Geometry.

Plane and Solid Geometry. Exercises in Geometry. PI.

and

Sol.

Geometry and

PI,

Trigonometry.

Plane Trigonometry and Tables. Plane and Spherical Trigonometry, Surveying. PI.

and Sph. Trigonometry, Surveying, and Tables

Trigonometry, Surveying, and Navigation.

Trigonometry Formulas. Logarithmic and Trigonometric Tables (Seven). Log. and Trig. Tables (Complete Edition). Analytic Geometry, Special

Terms and Circular on

Application,

PLANE AND SPHEEICAL

TRIGONOMETRY, AND

SURVEYING BY G. A.

WENTWORTH,

A.M.,

PBOFEBSOR OF JE^^MATICS IN PHILLIPS EXETER

^

ACADEJttT.

2Ceacl)ers* lEtiitton*

BOSTON COLLEGE PHYSICS DEPT. BOSTON,

U.S.A.:

GINN & COMPANY, PTTBLISHEES. 1891.

D/^ Jj

-y

t

X

Entered, according to the Act of Congress, in the year 1886, by

G, A.

h4

WENTWORTH,

in the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.

Typography by

J. S.

Gushing &

Prksswork. by Ginn

JUN19

&

Co.,

Boston, U.S.A.

Co., Boston, U.S.A.

/

PREFACE.

THIS

edition

is

intended for teachers,

publishers will under no

and for them

circumstances

teachers of Wentworth's Trigonometry

;

sell

only.

The

the book except to

and every teacher must con-

sider himself in honor bound not to leave his copy where pupils can

have

access to

Messrs. Ginn It

is

it,

and not

to sell his

copy except to the publishers,

& Company,

hoped that young teachers will derive great advantage from

studying the systematic arrangement of the work, and that ers

who

obliged

are to

pressed for time will

work out every problem

find in

great relief

the

all

teach-

by not being

Trigonometry and Sur-

veying. G. A.

^\

WENTWORTH.

TEIGONOMETET. Exercise 1.

What

are the functions of the

other acute angle

ABC{Yig. sin

2)?

B = -1 c

B

of the triangle

I.

Page

5.

1)

TRIGONOMETRY. ,

(

.,



A = 120

A, = 119

.

VI.) Sin

^

cos A

tan



A=

A = 120

,

cot

-

,

A = 169

CSC

>

169

A

119"

120 4. filled

What b,

make them angle? in

condition must be ful-

by the lengths

lines a,

Is

Example

c (Fig.

5.

of the

three

order to

2) in

the sides of a right this condition

3 a^

tions

.

119

120 sec A

.

169

169

^

tri-

fulfilled

?

+

b^

=

c^.

Find the values of the funcof A, if a, h, c respectively

have the following values (i.)

(ii.)

2mn, m^ — n'^,

_^,

x-y

x-vy,

mn?

:

-\-

n^.

TEACHERS EDITION. 6.

in

c,

Prove that the values of a, h, and (ii.), Example 5, satisfy

them the _^ 52

—= 24

cos B,

— =— =

cot B,

—=

tan B,

„ A = 143 = sm B,

cos J

sides of a right triangle. (i-)

a2

=

145

make

necessary to

condition

the

sin J.

(i.)

tan J.

^ g2^

.

145 94 143

mnf + (m^ — n^Y = (m'^ + n^)^, 4 rn^n^ + m* — 2 m?v? + n* = m* + 2 m^v? + n*, (2

cot J.

=

24



o A = 145 = CSC B,

sec A



143 A CSC -4

(li.)

2xy\

3^ x-yj •2

x^

o — Axy

+

+(aj

x^

+

3/^

-+

+

x2

2a;2/+2/2

B when a = 0.264, c = 0.265. ^2 = g2 _ 0^2

_ a;*+2a;V+.V^ — 2 + 2/2 a;?/

a;''

4a;y + a;*-2a;y + 2/* = a;* + 2cey + 2/*, a* + 2a;y + 2/* = a;* + 2a;y + 2/*. 7.

What

must be

.-.

= 0.070225-0.069696 = 0.000529. 6 = 0.023.

a, 5, c, in (iii.)

cos

^=- =

tanJl

=?=

sent the sides of a right triangle.

cot .4

or

Jp^
_|_

+

g2j,2g2

2^8^

_

a

^=

csc^ =

^

= ?^ = sec.g.

a

(iv.)

csc5,

23

6

=pH'^.

cot5,

264

sec^ = ^ =

7'2g2p2^

^=

— =tan5,

=- =

(iii.)

sin B,

23

6

repre-

—= 265

c

by the values of and (iv.), Example 5,

may

265

c

equations of condition

in order that the values

?^ = cos5,

sin^ = ^ =

satisfied

^2g2^2

264

2/1 12

t2/>-)2 1

10.

m^n's^

or 8.

and

A

Compute the functions of

9.

and

y^

\-

r>

B.

24

=

2/)'



= 145 = sec

+ m^p^v^ = n^(fr^.

Compute the

fun<;tions of J.

B when a = 24, & = 143. c

= =

\/(24)2

+

\/21025

= 145.

(143)2

and

Compute the functions oi

B when 6 = 9.5, c = 19.3. a^ = c^ — 52 = 372.49 - 90.25 = 282.24. .-.

a

= 16.8.

sin.4=^=l^ = c

193

cos5,

A

TRIGONOMETEY. 95 A= 5- = — .

cos

tan

cot

sec

b

95

^=-

95

a

168

CSC

2

"

Vq^ + pq

«

\/pi

tan 5,

b

95

c

193

a

168

—=

^=- =

.

P+

cot B,

—=

^=-=

+pq y/f i i-i = sm B, A = -b = — .

cos

c

—=

A=- =

.

.J, = sm ij,

193

c

CSC

is,

sec

D B.

-j-pq

sec

AA = ^ = fP + Q^ - = CSC B, " Vq^ +

CSC

A= _ p+ q = ^ Vp^ + pq

T>

j-

pq

c

Compute the functions

11.

and

of

A

B when = Vp^ + g^,

a

b

= V2pq

13.

and

+ 2pg' + p + q = c. p^

sin

cos

A=

=

^-^

A=- = c

Compute the functions

a2

= 2->/pq, + 52 = c\

a?

+ ipq =p'^ + 2pq +

a

=p — q'

b

c'^.

q

\/2pq

sin B,

p+q

sm

tI

cos J.

= - = ^2pq = tan B, ^

y/p"^

o

y/2pq

+

c

^ 12.

and

_ p

-\-

y/p^

tan -4

B,

cot J.

_ = sec

of

c=p + q,

A

CSC

14.

A = a-

2V^q p P+

tan 5,

.

pq P+9 =

p-q

CSC

B,

= 2&, + 62 = c2, + 62_c2,

462

= c2, C-6V5.

562

(

sec B.

2 6.

a

q

.

Compute the functions

when a =

a2

Vp2 +pq ^ —^ ^ i-2 = cos B, AA = -=

P+

= cos B,

9.

(^

= c^ — Q? = (f -{-pq. b = Vq^ + pq. c

^

9.

sec J. == ^

5,

b^

sm

=-= a

B when

.'.

— —

^y/pq

Compute the functions

a=Vp'^ +pq,

q^,

p+q „ i-i = sm B, = 2Vpq p+q pj-q cot B,

q^

q

+

= -b c

= esc

^

=p + q.

c

=- =^ c

.

CSC

A

cos 5,

V2pq cot J.

of

B when

a

p+

sec B.

of

A

TEACHERS EDITION. sm CO?

-d.

= -a = _2b_ = f V5 = 0.89443,

16.

Compute the functions

when a +

b

A=

= ^c. _ g2^ + 2a5 = ffc2, +

J2

a2-2a6 +

62

a2

bV5 a2

+

62

2.

b

cotA

b

=- =h a

2

b

a b

cscA = '- = ^'=iV5. 2b

a

15.

^

Compute the functions

when a =

I

of J.

c.

a

= fc,

^ ^2 _ 6 = Vc^ — a^

52

0^2^

2

sm

-, ^ = - = —- = 3' 3

p

&

cosul

=- =

tan J.

=-= ^

a

2

2^ — = ^\/5, -T

= fV5,

^V5

cot^ = ^

= :^.

^=-

fa ^"'

sec

2

csc^ = ^ = ?. a

2

=fV5,

= _7_c2,

—b=

of

A

'

TRIGONOMETRY.

6 17.

Compute the functions

of J.

CSC

when

^=-= «

a

V3I +

4 18.

a2-2a5 +

Z.2

+

52

G

_

2ab

+ + 2a6 +

a

6

=

c

g

16

20.5

5a =

I.

19.

I'

4

2a = -V31+-4

4 ..

a

26

= -(\/31 +

= - VSI - -. 4

4 .-.

6

l).

= |(V3l-l).

^(V3l +

1)

5'

61.5,

a =12.3.

= 31 c^

— = -,

5

^3

15c^

- Vsl, 4

sin J.

if

sin^ = ^ = ^.

16

a +

a

c2

&2

62

Find

= 20.5.

16

a2

1

—6=—

=

|

and

.

; ;

TEACHERS 23.

a

=

Find

CSC J.

.

c

6.45

esc J.

if

and

35.6

EDITIOISr.

28.

= - = -^ = a

35.6

c =

229.62.

pute the

6.45.

sm •

.-.

24.

given

Construct a right triangle c

= Q,

tan^ = a

.*.

Draw

=3

;

=

-.

3 and &

AB -= 2,

join

=f

tan -4

= 2.

and .5C

± to ^5

Cand A.

Prolong vie to D, making

AD = 6.

DE 1. to AB produced. A ADE will be similar to

Draw Rt.

rt.

^ACB. .'.

ADE

is

the

rt.

A required.

25. Construct a right triangle given a = 3.5, cos A = ^.

;

A A^B'C so that y=l, cos A = Construct A ABC similar to Construct

c^=

2.

Then

>}.

= 3.5.

A^B'C^, and having a

26. Construct a right triangle given 5 = 2, sin J. = 0.6.

Construct

rt.

A

A^B^C^, m'aking

a^= 6, and c = 10. Then sin A^= j%. Construct

A ABC

A^B'C^, and having

6

=

similar

to

2.

27. Construct a right triangle; given & = 4, cscA = 4.

A

Construct rt. 4 and a^= 1.

A^B^C'', having

c''=

Then construct A J.5(7 similar and having 6 = 4.

A A^B'C,

to

c

= 2.5

cos A = 0.8;

com-

In a right triangle,

miles, sin J.

= 0.6,

legs.

^ A — A= e

TRIGONOMETRY.

Exercise

II.

Page

Eepresent by lines the func-

1.

8.

Construct the angle x

x

if esc

tions of a larger angle than that

shown

in Fig.

Let O

3.

ABM

be a unit circle, with 0; construct -ST tangent to

centre

B = 2 OA

the circle at

then J. OT

OT;

0M= I radius

Take at P.

that sinx

is

less

than

tana;. 1,

but .'.

3.

OM: PM::OA:

AS,

0M< OA. PM< AS.

Show that sec x is

In

rt.

.'.

sec

4.

>

Show

greater than

OaS'> side

AS

greater than

cot>r.

OT=csc, BT=cot In A BOT, Hyp. 0T> .'.

CSC

>

Hence, construct an

Z

Construct the angle

Construct

side

rt.

PM= 2 OM.

x

x.

45°.

a;

if

sin x

Z PMO, making

Draw OP.

POM\b

Construct

10.

4 sin X is

if sin

a;

PM= sin x and 0M= cos

Then

tan.

that esc x

angle required.

by hypothesis, PM--= OM. by Geometry, x = 45°.

9.

AS=id.n.

A OAS, Hyp.

POif the

= 2 cos X.

tana;.

0/S'=sec,

is

But, .•.

In Fig.

M

cos X.

Let

Show

2.

At

OA.

meet the circumference Draw OP.

Construct the angle

8. 1.

cos x

if

± to

Then

Fig.

a;

2^-

erect a

=

connect

;

required angle.

Construct the angle

7.



is

the angle required. the

angle

if

= tan x.

Take J J/ erect a

of radius

OA

to

M.

At

meet the circumferDraw OP. ence at P. Then POil/ is the required angle. _L to

BT. 11.

cot.

angle

Show is

that the sine

of

an

equal to one-half the chord

tan x of twice the angle. Have given Z POA. Construct POB = 2 POA. Draw unit circle, he a with Let Then it is ± to OA tan- chord PB. centre 0; then construct and PM, its half, is the sine of POA. gent to the circle at J. = 3 OA .•. sin a; = 2 chord 2a;. then J. or is required angle. 5.

Construct the angle x

if

O BAM

AT



;

;

TEACHEES EDITION.

9

AB

Let be the sine of the Z a; in 12. Find x if since is equal to one-half the side of a regular in- a circle whose centre is 0. Draw perpendicular to the scribed decagon.

AC

Let AC\)Q a side of a decagon.

Then

360°

=

vertical diameter.

Then CO = AB. Take CF on vertical diameter

or^Oa

36°

10

=

Draw

CO.

FD

perpendicular to

Draw OB bisecting AO. Then Z ^0(7 will be bisected, and Z ^05

vertical diameter,

and meeting

cir-

=

cumference at D. Draw perpendicular to

OB

18°.

But

and draw OD. 0F= 2 CO by construction.

AOB = 18°.

X or

.'.

DE

oiAOB=^\AQ.

the sine

ED=FO;

FO being the projecGiven x and y {x + y being tion of the radius OD. construct the value less than 90°) .-. = 2 AB, and DOB = &nglQ — sin of sin 13.

DE

;

{x

Let

+ y)

x.

required.

AB = sin

whose centre

(a;

0,

is

+ y) and

in a circle

CD = sin

x.

16. Given an angle x construct Then, with a radius equal to CI), an angle y such that cos 3/ = J cos a;. describe an arc from B, as centre, Let OB = cos AOB. cutting &t E. Erect a ± CD at C, the middle Then BJA will be the constructed point of OB, and meeting the cir— value of sin (x + y) sin x. cumference at D. Draw DO. Then DOB is the angle required. 14. Given x and (x + y being ;

AB

y

less

than 90°)

of tan (x

+

construct the value

;

y)



sin {x

+

y)

+

tan x

— sin X. Let

CI)

also

and

AB

Let be the tangent of x. Prolong to C, making AB, and draw OC from 0, the

AB

a;

3

3/),

0F=i2,xxx.

AC=

centre of the circle.

F with

a radius

= AB

take

From ^with

a radius

=

GF

add

From

;

AB = sin {x + y), = sin EF = tan {x +

and

17. Given an angle x construct an angle y such that tan 3/ = 3 tan a;.

COA

is

the required angle.

18. Given an angle x construct an angle y such that sec y = esc a;. ;

HI.

From / with

a radius

= CD

take

Since sec

Then ^^will be the constructed

£

— sin {x + y) +

b

value of tan {x tan X

+ y)

— sin x.

.'.

a

=

esc,

—£ a

=

b.

Hence, construct an isosceles right 15. Given an angle x construct triangle. an angle y such that siny = 2 sin a?. The required angle will be 45°. ;

:

;

:

TRIGONOMETRY.

10 19.

Show by

2 sin J.

construction

that

sin ( J.

.-.

+ P)

> sin 2 A.

< sin ^ + sin B.

Construct Z BOC and Z COA 21. Given sin a; in a unit circle each equal to the given Z A. find the length of a line corre^^^'^ = 2 sin A, and AD, the ing in position to sin a; 11 .„uio Then to OB, = sin 2 ^. whose radius is r. J_ let fall from ^

AB

A

But AB > AD. Hence 2 sin J.

> sin

1

r sin x required line. length of line required = r sin

:

2 A. .•.

:

:

:

x.

Given two angles A and B 22. In a right triangle, given the being less than 90°), show hypotenuse c, and also sin A = 7?i, that sin {A + B) sin A + sin B. = Z ^, and COH cos A = n find the legs. Construct 20.

{A^ B

<

HOK

;

= ZB. Then

(A + B)

sin

=

CP, sin

A=

UK, sin ^ = CD. Now CP
(7P<

c .'.

cos

EK>DE.

and

sm ^ = - = m. a

=

cm.

A — - = n. c

CD+HK. Exercise

.'.

III.

Page

b

=

en.

11.

2. Express the following funcExpress the following funcas functions of the comple- tions as functions of an angle less than 45° mentary angle 1.

tions

sin 30°.

CSC 18°

cos 45°.

cos37°24^

tan 89°.

cot82° 19^

cot 15°.

CSC 54°

10^

46^

= cos (90° - 30°) = cos 60°. cos 45° = sin (90° -45°) = sin 45°. tan 89° = cot (90° -89°) = cot 1°. cot 15° = tan (90° -15°) = tan 75°. esc 18° 10^= sec (90° - 18° 10^ = sec 71° 50^. cos 37° 24^= sin (90° - 37° 24^ = sin 52° 36^. cot 82° 19^= tan (90° - 82° 19^ = tan 7° 41^ esc 54° 46^= sec (90° - 54° 46^ = sec 35° 14^

sin 30°

sin 60°.

;

TEACHEES EDITION. 3.

tan 30°

Given

= ^ V3

;

Given cot ^ J. = tan A find A.

8.

find

11

;

cot 60°.

tan

= cot(90°-30°) = cot 60°. .•.cot60° = J\/3,

J^ = 90°-^, ^ = 180° -2^, 3^ = 180°.

tan30°

.-.

4.

Given tan tan

90°

;

find

A.

A = cot (90° - A),

9.

find

- J. = A, 2^ = 90°. .-.

5.

A = cot A

A = 60°.

Given tan (45° + ^)

=

cot

A

^

A = tan (90° - A), -A) = tan (45° + A), 90° - J. = 45° + A, 2 J. = 45°. A = 22° 30^ cot

tan (90°

A = 45°.

^ = sin 2 J. find J.. cos A = sin (90° - A),

Given cos

A = cot (90° - A),

.'.

;

A if sin ^ = cos 4 A. sin A = cos (90° - A),

10. Find

dO°-A = 2A, 3^ = 90°. A = 30°.

dO°-A = 4:A, 5 A = 90°. A = 18°.

.-.

.'.

6.

Given sin ^

= cos 2 .4 find A. sin A = cos (90° - A\ 90°-A = 2A, 3 A = 90°. /.

;

11.

Find

^ if cot ^ = tan 8^. A = tan (90° - A), 8A = 90°-A, 9 A = 90°. A = 10°.

cot

A = 30°.

.'.

7.

find

Given cos

J.

= sin (-15° — J ^

12. ;

J..

A = sin (90° - A), 90°- J. = 45° -J J., cos

180°

-2^ = 90° -A .-.

^ if cot J. = tan nA. cot A = tan (90° - A), 90°- A = nA, 90° = A{n+ 1).

Find

.:A = ^^.

A = 90°.

Exercise IV. 1. Prove Formulas [1] - [3], using for the functions the line values in

unit circle given in §

3,

n+

Page

1

12.

+

[1].

sin^^

[2].

tan^=^-HL4.

cos^yl

cos J.

=

1.

^ '

.

TEIGONOMETRY.

12 [3].

AxcscA = l, AxsQc A = l, tan J.X cot J. = l. sin

BH^BC

.

(?5

*

cos

but

(?5

CX)

=

1,

BC^l.

BH=—. CB BHxCB =

l,

=

1.

CSC J.

X

sin J.

cos

A = BB,

sec J.

In similar

A

=

BF.

5i^^ and BCB,

BF: BE:: BC BB. :

BF _BC BE BB' .

Fig.

2.

DC= sin J., BD = cos J.,

[1].

DC^ + BD^ = but

BC^l.

(7^2

,'.

= 1. BC^ + BD"" = 1. sin^A + cosM = 1. CB^

BF=^

BFxBB =

.-.

.'.

BE=1,

but

sec

~

BB l,

A X cos J. = 1. A = EF, cotA=GR.

tan

BC= sin A, BB = cos A,

[2]

In similar

A GSB and FEB,

OH: OB:: BE:

EF=iQ.nA.

GH_BE.

A FBE and ^Ci) are similar. FE BE:: CB BB. .-.

:

FE_CB_. BE BB'

but

BE==1.

but

BE==1.

GH-

2.

CB = sin J., 55"= CSC A.

[3].

In similar :

/i^

HGB and

QB

::

BC:

Prove that

tan^ = 7,

1 +tan2J.

sec^

= sec'A = -. c

b a-'

(75i),

CB.

1

FE GBxFE=l. cot A X tan A = l.

FE = CB BB sin A tan J.= cos A

^S"

GB FE' GB = 1.

:

Or.

FE,

Dividing

all

+ b^ = c\ the terms

by

5^,

TEACHERS EDITION. 52

a^

Substituting for

^ g2



Substitutins ^ for

and



values cot^J. and

1

= sec^J..

Prove that

1

+

cot^ CSC 0,2

Dividing

all

_j.

cot^^

4.

- csc^^.

=-',

^

c^.

the terms

O^

52

^ g2

a?

a?

0?



their

a?

csc^J.,

we have

cot2^

= csc^J..

Prove that cot

cot^ sin

a

A=— a 52

+

and

we have

+

tan^^

3.

sec^J.,

— o?

their 1

values idiU^A and

13

by

o?,

A

=

A = cos A sin A

.

TRIGONOMETKY.

14 cot

^ = 0.75.

sec

A=

— 0.6

3.

A = 1.6667.

CSC

J_ A = 0.8'

CSC

A = 1.25,

Find the values of the other

functions

when

cos

+

cos^

sin^

sm

sec

1

A = ff =

1,

TEACHERS EDITION.

15

-^l^h4 COS

.-.

J.=

sin

A = iVS.

tan

A = cos

tan J. sec

1

A^

COS CSC

=

A

I V2 1

^= sin

A

V2.

= ^—— =

.

A

Vs.

1

2

=

V2.

1

cot^ =

1

^

tan^

\y/2

iV3.

CSC 7.

Find the values of the other

functions

tan -4

when

sin-4

= 0.5.

cot J.

=

2.

A sin A tan^ = cot

9.

0.5

cos -4

2 cos

A = sin

4 cos^ J.

— sin^^ =

(squaring)

A=

esc

— = V2

\/2.

sin

J.=

cos

^ = Vl - (^ V2)2 =

1V2,

vT^

1

=

=1

5 cos^J.

when

A.

cosM + sin^^ =

cos J.

Find the values of the other

functions

= a/- = 0.45.

v|=jA

tan^=i^ = l, ^V2

=4 4cos2^— sin2^ = 5sin2J. = 4 4cos2J.4- 4sin2J.

cot

1 sec

sin

= 0.90 A = -^'5

sec

A=

1

cos CSC

A=

A

1 sin

A

^ = 1 = 1, A = r-^ =

= 2.22.

10.

Find the values of the other

functions

= 1.11.

cos

cos

when

A= sec

sin

A

sec -4

=

A = Vl — cos^^

sin

A = 7n.

= sin ^

m

cos

Vl — TO^

A

w Vl — m'^

2.

\

= -, 2

when

A = Vl — sinM = Vl — m^,

Find the values of the other

functions

V2.

iV2

tan -4 8.

'

cot^

— w?

1

tan yl

1

—7n?

mVl — m'^

16

TRIGONOMETRY.

sec

1

A=

cos

CSC

,

^i _ ^2

^

1

A=

sin

11.

1

A

A

1

m

Find the values of the other ^

A

2m

TEACHERS EDITION.

cos 30°

17

TRIGONOMETRY.

18

.*.

4 + 2\/2 =v V4-2V2

=

COS

20, Given tan 90° = other functions of 90°.

tan 90°=

= aV2+V2. cot

=

find the

;

00.

—=—= tan

^1_2±V2 sm =

00

0.

00

sm cos

\

'4-2-V2

=.^'2z:^=iV2:vI. Given siB(F

18.

= CO cos^ sin^ + cos^ = 1 — COS^ = CO CO cos^ = 1. sin^

= 0;

find

the

other fanctions of 0°.

= Vl — sm^ = Vl -0. cos = 1. cos

.*.



=

sin

= 00.

sin

=

sec

= -1 = 00.

CSC

=

tan=?^=? = 0. cos cot

=

1

= - = 00. tan

sec

CSC

=

=

—= 1

1 -

cos

1

1

= 11.

—=

COS

-xi

\ CO

cos^



1

0.

1.

1.

21. Express the values of all the other fanctions in terms of sin A.

= _1 = 00.

By

sin

formnlae on pages 11 and 12,

A = sin A, cos A = Vl — sin^^, sin ^ tan^ =

sin

19. Given sin 90°= 1; other functions of 90°.

find the

,

sin 90°

= 1.

.

Vl — sin'^^l

= Vl — sin^ = 0. 1 sin _ tan = —- = - = CO. cos

cot

J.=

Vl - sin^^ sin

.

cos cot

=

— =—= tan

sec

=

1

A=

0.

CO

— =-= 1

sec

CSC CO.

A=

A

1

Vl - sinM 1

sin^

COS 1 CSC= -r-

sm

1 1 = 7= i. 1

22. Express the values of all the other fanctions in terms of cos A.

TEACHEE-S

By formula on sin

A=

pages 11 and 12,

EDITION.

19

TRIGONOMETRY.

20

= sin^ J. + 4 sin^ J. = 5 siu^A = 1, sin^J.

+

cos^J.

1.

1.

sinM = i5 sin

A

iV5. '

".

26. sin

A

cos J.

n

= |V5.

Given 4 sin ^ and tan J.. J,

But

sin

= tan ^

^

;

find

TEACHERS EDITION. tan

A

sin

_

cos cos

cot J.=

sin

A A A A

sin^^ cos

tan^ + cot^=^HL^ + ^-^^

A

cos

sin

A

EXEECISE VI. 1,

In Case

of finding

c,

cos

II.

give another

after h has

way

been found.

A = -, c

h = c c

cos A, h

=

COS

2.

A

In Case III. give another way c, after a has been found.

of finding

«

A

c

c&va.

A = a, c

a

=

sin

3.

A

In Case IV. give another

of finding

6,

after the angles

way have

been found. cos

A = -y c 6

4.

=c

cos A.

In Case V. give another

of finding

c,

after the angles

been found. ^ A = —, G

cos A

c cos J.

=

c

=

h,

cos J.

21

way have

=

^va?A

+

tan J.

+ cot A-

cos^J.

1.

+

cos^^

A sin A

22

TRIGONOMETEY. sin

c &'m

A A = a, =

c

sin J.

8.

Given

b

and

cos J.

=

c

-.

;

find A,

b, a.

;;

TEACHEES log h

= 0.30103,

log c

h

=2.

log cos

A is an isosceles ^ = ^ = 45°.

the

.*.

.-.

required b

=

A.

log b

16.

c

=2011.6

B = (90° - ^) = 66""

Given

required b

575.0.

= c sm A. a = log c + log

log

log log

= sin A = = a

=

a

sin

log

A.

log c log sin log

2.39797

a

a

250.02.

log

log

log

cos A.

- 2.79727 cos A = 9.96240

log c

=2.75967

log b

log cos

b

= 575.

h

17.

required

c

2011.6.

B = 61°

55^

= c sin A. « = log c + log a

log log log

log

a

A,

= 1.85824 A = 9.80412 = 1.66236 = 45.958. = c cos A. 6 = log c + log

=

cos A.

1.85824

sin

^.

= 3.35793 sin A = 9.67280 = 3.03073 a = 1073.3. c

5

log 5

= c cos A. = log c + log

cos A.

A = 9.88699 = 1.74523 = 55.620.

Given g=-1, A = 36°; required a = 0.58779, 5 = 0.80902.

= 2280, A = 28° 5^ 5 = 54°, B = 61° 55^, a = 1073.3,

Given

15.

=

sin

c

log 6

6

= c sin J., a = log c + log

6

6

log

26^

a

9.60070

= c cos A. = 6 log c + log

= 72. 15, A = 39° 34^; 26^ a = 45.958,

^ = 50°

30^.

2.79727

c

c

B = 50°

= 55.620.

a

log

= 3.35793 A = 9.94560 = 3.30353

b

= 627, A = 23^ 30^ B = 66° 30^ a = 250.02,

Given

14.

rt.

23

EDITION".

;

TRIGONOMETRY.

24

= c cos A. 6 = log c + log

logc

b

log

log cos

A = 9.90796 = 9.90796 = 0.80902.

log b b

Given

=

=

c

200,

^ = 68°

required b

A.

= 0.00000

log c

18.

cos

10

B = 21°

13^

=

a

47^

185.72,

74.219.

13^

sm

-d

=— c

a log a

= c sin ^. = log c + log

sin

A.

COS

A.

= 2.30103 sin A = 9.96783 = 2.26886 a = 185.73.

log c log log

a

cos .4

= -• c

&

log 6 log G

log cos log b

6

19.

=

= 2.30103 A = 9.56949 = 1.87052 = 74.22.

Given

required 6

= c COS .4. = log c + log

c

=

93.4,

A = 13°

35^

B = 76° 25^ a

=

90.788.

A = 13°

35^

= c sin A. a = log c + log

a log

sin

;

21.936,

A.

TEACHERS EDITION.

25

26

TRIGONOMETRY.

teachers' edition.

B = 52° h cos A = c =c c =

h

¥.

cos

^.

h

COS J.

log

log 5

colog COS log c c

= log h + Colog = 0.60206 A = 0.10307 = 0.70513 = 5.0714. G

a

=

86.53,

3^

log a

= 1.85600 = 8.06283 A = 9.91883 = 56° 3^ = 33° 57^

log sin

A .5

= log a + log a = 1.85600 cot J. = 9.82817 = 1.68417 b = 48.324. log 6

log log &

= 0.60206 log tan A = 9.89177 = 0.49383 log a = 3.1176. a

=

A = log a + colog

COS A.

= b tan ^. = log & + log tan A.

a

71.78

B = 33°

log sin

colog c

A = --

log a

c

A = 56°

;

57^

= 48.324.

log

tan

Given

30.

required b

27

c.

cot A.

log h

Given

31.

required

6

Given

29.

6

=

^

c

=

31°

8590,

24^

a

=

4476

B = 58°

colog c log a

A=—

log sin

colog c log sin

A B

a

=

8.49

;

46^

A

J.

=— <^

= 90° - .4. = 9.02919 = 0.92891 A = 9.95810 = 65° 14^ = 24° 46^ .5

36^

= log a + colog c. = 3.65089 = 6.06601 A = 9.71690 = 31° 24^. = 58° 36^

log sin J. log a

9.35,

c

7332.8. Sin

=

= 3.917. sm

required

c

A = 65° 14^ B = 24°

A B cos

A=— c

= c COS A. = 0.97081 cos A = 9.62214 = 0.59295 b = 3.917. 6

log c cot

A=—

= log a + log = 3.65089 a cot A = 10.21438 b = 3.86527 log h

log log

log b

log

a

= 7332.8.

log cot

A. b

32.

Given c=2194, 6

required

a

=

1758.

^=53°

15',

=

1312.7;

B = 36°

45^

TRIGONOMETRY.

28

COS

log 6

A=

TEACHERS EDITION. Given a = 415.38, & = 62.080; required ^ = 81° 30^ .S = 8° 30^ 36.

c

= 420. tan log a

A==

2.61845

= 8.20705 - 10 log tan A = 10.82550 = 81° 30^ A = 8°30^ B

colog b



Bin

^

AA = --

29

TRIGONOMETRY.

sin

A = c— sin

log a

colog sin log c c

A

= log a + colog sin A. = 0.69897 A = 0.19375 = 0.89272 = 7.8112.

log

c

axh

F

30

15.

Compute the unknown parts

40.

the and a = 0.615, c = also

I

.

.

area,

having given

70.

a

sm A^-G

log sin J.

= log

log a

=9.78888-10

colog c

log sin

A £ tan

log a

log b

b

c.

= 8.15490-10 A = 7.94378 = 30^ 12^^. = 89° 29^ 48'^ A^--

log &

colog tan

a + colog

= log a + colog tan A. = 9.78888 - 10

A = 2.05626 = 1.84514 = 70.007.

TEACHERS EDITION.

= log a + colog sin A. = 0.84510 A = 0.50461 = 1.34971

log log a

colog sin log c

c

sm

tan

J.

=

^ = c-. = c sin^. a = log c + log sin A. a

log

= 22.372.

c

31

log

c

log sin -•

log a

a

= 1.13792 A = 9.68739 = 0.82531 = 6.6882.

tan J. log h

- 0.84510

log a

colog tan

A = 0.48224 - 10

b

logi^

logF

F

the

also 12,

area,

c

parts

also

sm

a log a

log b

colog COS log c

c

c

log sin

h

A

= log b + colog COS A.

= 1.07918 A = 0.05874 = 1.13792

= 13.738.

= c sin A. = log c + log

=

log c

COS

log

A = -' c

c

=

given

having given

A=— c

the area, having

= 68, ^ = 69°54^ A = 69° 54^ B = 20° 6^

^=29°8^ A = 29° 8^. B = 60° 52^ COS

Compute the unknown parts

44.

and

"

Compute the unknown

43.

=

colog 2

= 1.32734 = 9.69897-10 = 1.87141 = 74.371.

log 6

colog 2

6

log 5

F=^ab. = 0.84510

log a

= 0.82531 = 1.07918 = 9.69897-10 = 1.60346 = 40.129.

log a

= 1.32734 = 21.249.

log b

and

F= I ab. log F= log a + log 5 + colog 2.

= log a + colog tan ^.

A.

1.83251

A = 9.97271

log a

=1.80522

a

= 63.859. cos

sin

A = -. c

6

log 6

=c

cos

= log

c

^.

+

log cos A.

TRIGONOMETKY.

32

=

log c

log cos

46.

1.83251

and

A = 9.53613

a

= 1.36864 = 23.369.

log b b

Compute the unknown also

the area, having 48° 49^.

= 47, ^ =

A = 41° IK = a cot -4, b = log a + log cot A.

b

F= J ab.

log i^

F

=746.15.

log b colog 2

log a log cot

log& b

Compute the unknown parts

45.

and c

log

= 1.80522 = 1.36864 = 9.69897-10 = 2.87283

log a

the area, having given

also

= 27, B = M°4:'. A = 45° 56^ a

=

c sin

A.

= log c + log = 1.43136 A = 9.85645 = 1.28781 = 19.40.

log a

f

log c log sin

log a

a

sin

log c log cos log b

&

= 1.43136 A = 9.84229 = 1.27365 = 18.778.

F= J a6. log a log b

colog 2

log -F

F

A.

= c cos A. 5 = log c + log cos A.

6

log

= 1.28781 = 1.27365 =9.69897-10

= 2.26043 = 182.15.

parts

given

= A= =

1.67210 10.05803

1.73013

= 53.719.

TEACHERS EDITION. c

log c

=

mi A

= log

a

colog sin A.

4-

=1.11332

log a

colog sin ^"==0.08523

= 1.19855 = 15.7960

log c c

i^-

^ ah.

= 1.11332 = 0.95424 = 9.69897-10 = 1.76653

log a log 6

colog 2

logi^

= 58.416. Compute the unknown

48.

and c

=

also

8.462,

the area,

B = m°¥. ^ = 3° 56^ a

log a log c log sin

parts

having given

= c sin A. = log c + log

sin

A.

= 0.92747 A = 8.83630

log a

=9.76377-10

a

= 0.58046.

= c cos A. = log c +log = 0.92747 A = 9.99898 = 0.92645 = 8.442. h

log h log c

log cos log b 6

cos ^.

33

TRIGONOMETRY.

34 53.

Given i^=

58,

a

=

10

;

solve

tan

A = -'

the triangle.

F= I ah.

log tan log a

a log 6

log2P

colog 6

= log

2 i^ + colog a.

=2.06446

= 9.00000 - 10 = 1.06446 = 11.6.

colog a log h

h

tan log tan

A=A = loga + colog b.

= 1.00000 = 8.93554 - 10 colog b log tan^ = 9.93554 = 40° 45^ 48^^ A log a

B

=49°14M2^>'.

sin^ log € log a

colog sin

.4

log c c

54.

= log

a

+ colog sin A.

= 1.00000 = 0.18513 = 1.18513 = 15.315.

Given i^=

18,

6

= 5;

solve

the triangle.

F= I ah. 2F log a

log2i?' colog b

log a

a

= log

2 i^ + colog

=1.55630

= 9.30103 - 10 = 0.85733 = 7.2.

"

6.

log

A = log a + colog b. = =

0.85733 9.30103

-10

;

35

TEACHERS EDITION. tan 29°

= & tan 29°. log a = log b 4- log tan 29°. a

log 6

= 0.81823

log tan 29°

=

log a

= 0.56198 = 3.6474.

a

9.74375

but .-.

cos

«

A



= 2 )4.26867 = 2.13434 2.13434 = log 136.25. 62 - 242 = 136.25. 62 = 378.25. log 6 = Hlog 378.25). = 1.28889. 6 = 19.449.

log\/l8564

= ^.

c

log COS c

= sin 29°

log c

log a colog sin

= log a + colog sin 29°.

c

Given i^= 100,

56.

c

= 22;

the triangle.

F= ab a

=

1

ab

=

100.

200.

= 2_00

'

b

40000 62

o3

+

52

= c2 = 484.

Substitute,

40000

+

62

= 484.

62

= 484 62. 6* -484 62 = -40000.

40000

¥-{

)

+

6*

+(242)2= 18564.

solve

colog

= 1.28889

colog c

= 8.65758 A = 9.94647 = 27° 52^

A B

= 0.87641 = 7.5233.

A = log 6 +

log 6

log cos

= 0.56198 29° = 0.31443

log c

A = -'

=62° 8^

c.

TRIGONOMETRY. log

a

'

TEACHERS EDITION. 61.

120

At a

log a

horizontal distance of

from the foot of a

feet

steeple,

log cot J.

the angle of elevation of the top to be 60° 30^ find the

log b

height of the steeple.

b

was found

;

A=—

tan

a = b tan A. a = log b + log tan A.

log

a

breadth measured along the bank, the point A being directly opposite a tree C on The angle the other side. = 96 was also measured. If 21° 14^ find the feet, and to find the

of a river a distance

ABO=

breadth of the river. If

ABC= 45°, what would be

breadth of the river 62.

From

326

out of the

feet

water, the angle of depression of a boat was found to be 24° find the

log log

distance of the boat from the foot of the rock.

A=— a = a + cot A. b = log a + log cot a.

b

log a log cot

log 6 6

B = AC ^AB. AC=ABxt&nB. AC = log AB + log tan B.

AB = 1.98227 log tan B = 9.58944

;

log

the

?

tsin

the top of a rock that

rises vertically

cot

AB was

ABC AB

= 2.07918 tan A = 10.24736 = 2.32654 a = 212.1.

log 5

log

= 2.30103 = 1.21351 = 3.51454 = 3270.

In order

64.

b

log

37

log^C

=1.57171

AC

=

37.3 feet.

AC = log AB + log tan B. = 1.98227 log AB log tan B = 10.00000 log

= 2.51322 A = 10.35142 = 2.86464 = 732.22.

log^C

=

AC

=96

1.98227 feet.

65. Find the angle of elevation a monument, in of the sun when a tower a feet high a level plain, from the eye, if the casts a horizontal shadow b feet height of the monument is 200 feet long. Find the angle when a = 120, 63.

How

far

is

and the angle of elevation of the top 3° 30^

?

cot J. b

log 6

5

=

70.

tan^ =

=—

b

a

=a

-.

cot A.

= log

a

+

log cot A.

tan log tan

A

120 70

^ = log

120

+

colog 70.

TRIGONOMETRY.

38

= 2.07918 = 8.15490 - 10 colog 70 log tan J. = 10.23408 = 59° 44^ 35^^ A log 120

vessel,

=

and equal one hour's progress

10 miles.

A C= distance due east passed over in one hour.

As the

direction of the ship

is

north-east,

How high

A = 45°.

a tree that casts a horizontal shadow b feet in length when the angle of elevation of the sun is A° ? Find the height of the 66.

tree

when tan

b

is

= 80°, A = 50°.

log

log

a= log

= log b + log tan A. = 1.90309

a

log 6 log tan

h tan A.

cos A.

= 1.00000 cos A = 9.84949 = 0.84949 b = 7.0712 miles due east,

log 10 log

A = -•

= c cos A. b = log c + log

b

b

and

due north, since

also

AP= AO.

A = 10.07619 = 1.97928 = 95.34.

log a

a

In front of a window 20

69.

high

is

feet

a flower-bed 6 feet wide.

How long must a ladder be to reach from the edge of the bed to the 67. What is the angle of elevawindow ? if it inclined plane rises tion of an 1 foot in a horizontal distance of 40 tan J. = -• feet?

tan

log tan

A = -'

A = log 20 + colog 6. = =

log 20

log tan

A = loga + colog b.

= 0.00000 = 8.39794-10 colog b log tan A = 8.39794 log a

A

=1°

colog 6 log tan

1.30103

9.22185-10

A = 10.52288 = 73°

A

25' 56'^

c

=

18^

a sin -4

A

due northeast with a velocity of 10 miles an log hour. Find the rate at which she colog is moving due north and also due 68.

ship

is

AB

be the direction of the

c

c

sin

= log 20

-f-

= 1.30103 A = 0.01871 = 1.31974 = 20.88. a

log c

east.

Let

log

sailing

colog sin A.

TEACHERS EDITION. 70.

A ladder 40

so placed that

dow

it

feet

long

may be

will reach a win-

33 feet high on one side of the and by turning it over with-

street,

out

moving

window

its

Find

side.

foot

it

will reach a

21 feet high on the other the

breadth

of

street.

cos

33 Bp =^ —

40 log 33

colog 40 log cos

B tan

= 1.51851 = 8.39794 - 10 B = 9.91645 = 34° 2V 45^^

5 = —.

the

39

40

TRIGONOMETRY.

and at a point 100

feet nearer the

How high is

fort it is 45°.

the fort

A ABC, ZBAC= 30°,

In

rt.

?

Z ABC=

and

.-.

60°.

BC=^AB = ^x212>.20 = 136.60 feet.

A

73. From a certain point on the ground the angles of elevation of the belfry of a church and of the top of a steeple were found to be 40° and 51° respectively. From a point 300 feet farther off, on a horizontal

100

C

A'

ft.

B represent

Let

horizontal plane,

the

fort,

AC

the

£C a ± from

line,

the angle of elevation of the

top

of the

33°

45''.

fort

steeple is found to be Find the distance from

the belfry to the top of the steeple.

to plane,

BAC= angle

made by

= 30°. BA^Q= 45° = angle

line from

eye of observer 100

of elevation

feet nearer.

From A^ draw A^Nl. In rt. A AA^N, Z.

and

^

NAA^=^

AB.

30°,

= 60°. NA^= 50 feet.

iV^.4^^ .-.

AN= \/(100)2- (50)2

/.

= In

to

rt.

\/7500

= 50\/3

= 86.602. A BNA'

^^ = cot NBA'= cot

DE ± to AB from A BED

Draw In

= ^ BD 15°,

^Z)

NA' and log

B]Sr=

NA'

log cot 15

log^iV

BN AN AB

NA' cot 15°.

= 1.69897 = 0.57195 = 2.27092

= 186.60 = 86.60 = 273.20

log 300 log sin 33° log

sin 33° 45^.

= 300xsin33°45^ = 2.47712

45^= 9.74474

ED

=

2.22186

Z EAD = 180°- 33° 51°) = 17° 15^ In

D.

45^

-

A ADE ED = sin 17° 15^.

AD

(ISO"

TEACHERS EDITION.

AD = log

ED

ED sin 17° 15^

= 2.22186

colog sin 17° 15^= 0.52791

log

AD

= 2.74977

A ADC DC = cos 51°. AD DC= AD cos 51°. = 2.74977 log AD

In

= 9.79887 = 2.54864

log cos 51° log

In

DO A ADO

^= DC

tan 51°.

AC=DOiQ.uf>l°. log

DC

41

42

TRIGONOMETRY.

Exercise VII.

Page

25.

TEACHERS EDITION.

= 2(90°-^). 2a

a c

8. c

In an

and h

;

= 2a

cos

A.

isosceles triangle,

find A, C, a.

given

43

TRIGONOMETKY.

44 log Jc

=

TEACHERS EDITION. 14. In an isosceles triangle, given c

= 9,

^

= 20

tan

;

colog h log

A,

c,

a.

^C=i^.

log tan ^ c

log^c

find

= log J c +

colog

=0.65321

= 8.69897 - 10

A.

45

TRIGONOMETRY.

46

F= i cA.

^c

A=

COS

Jc log a

= log I c + colog cos A.

logic

=0.41497

colog cos

A = 0.81547 =

log a

tan J

A

21.

1.23044

C.

J'=A(/itaniC)

= h^ barn

tan J

is

40

of the roof

pitch

=17.

a

=A

C.

X

is

80 feet, the 45°; find the

length of the rafters and the area

of both sides of the roof. 17.

In an

isosceles triangle, find

F in terms F= J ch.

the value of

of

a and

40-2 = 20 = ^c. cos^ = fc^a = 20 a. 20 = a cos A.

c.

-f-

4 a2

=v

-

a

c2

= log 20 + = 1.30103 A = 0.15051 = 1.45154

log a log 20

Z^=2c(jV4a2-c2)

colog cos

= |c\/4a2-c2.

log a

isosceles triangle, find

F in terms of a and F= I ch.

the value of

28.284 C.

= a sin f C. h = a cos J 0. F= a sin ^ Cx a cos J C.

Jc

19.

In an

22. In a unit circle what is the length of the chord corresponding to the angle 45° at the centre ? sin J

of a and A.

F=lch.

F= a cos Ax a sin A sin J. cos

log a

= log a log = 0.00000 -j-

sin J C.

logsin ^(7= 9.58284

ic= a cos A. h = a sin A.

= a^

(7= i^. a

log J c

isosceles triangle, find

F in terms

X 80 = 2262.72. X 2 = 4525.44.

2262.72

= a^ sin J C cos J C. the value of

colog cos A.

= 28.284.

a In an

20 cos -4

= *V4a2-c2.

18.

=

logjc

=9.58284-10

Jc

=0.382683.

G

= 0.76537.

A.

= 30, = 44, find

23. If the radius of a circle

In an isosceles triangle, find and the length of a chord the value of in terms of h and C. the angle at the centre. 20.

F



TEACHERS EDITION.

= 3,

then

sin h

C= —

Let a

sinK'=— a

logsin JC= log

2^

c

+ colog

^

a.

log sin i

=1.34242

logic

=

colog a

8.52288

- 10

log 1

colog 3

log sin ^(7= 9.86530

47 c

= 2,

1.

3

C= log 1 + colog 3. = 0.00000 = 9.52288 - 10

IC

=47° 10^

log sin J (7= 9.52288

C

= 94°

i

C C

20^

and J c =

=19° 19°

28^ 16|^^.

= 38°

56^ 33^^^

24. Find the radius of a circle if 26. Find the area of a circular a chord whose length is 5 subtends sector if the radius of the circle = 12 at the centre an angle of 133°. and the angle of the sector = 30°. sin i (7= i^-

Area

O = irE^.

Area

sector

a

= log

log a

logic

Jc

+ colog

sin J C.

=0.39794

=0.43554

a

=

25.

What

is

360

is

2.7261.

the angle at the cen-

equal to | of the radius

+

log

TT

log 30

tre of a circle if the corresponding

chord

360 log area sector

colog sin -^(7= 0.03760 log a

=

?

+

=

log 30

2 log R.

-f

colog

48

TE-IGONOMETRY.

TEACHERS EDITION.

49

TRIGONOMETRY.

50 tan J (7= t^.

h

14 tanJ(7=^-^-L^=^. 14 p 196 logp = I (log 196 + log tan ^ C).

=

log 196 log tan

^C

2.29226

=9.68271

51

TEACHERS EDITION. having n sides, BA the side of the Then polygon having 2n sides. OA is ± to 5 C at its middle point

log

= 0.38278 = 0.90309 = 1.28587 = 19.3139.

log h

D.

ZBOA^ 360° 2n

ZOBC=dO°-

logi^

180°

n 180°

Ic^=-^

n

A'= 180^

n

logic^

^90o_ 180 n

^90° n

= cos 90°"

^c = 1

n

b

90° J.

cos

n

Whence, h

he

=

90°

o cos 2

cos

n

12.

Compute the

—n 90°

difference

be-

tween the areas of a regular octagon and a regular nonagon if the perimeter of each

^

is

16.

2n 1

16

QAO

^ = i^=22°30^ n

log A

,

=

logjc log cot log A

= log I c +

^

0.00000

=10.38278

=

0.38278

20°.

log A^= log ^ c'-f log cot A\

A ABC= Z OB A- Z OBC

ic i—

180°

18

n'

Q0°

/9Qo_90^\



= — = 0.8889.

2n^

The A BOA is isosceles. .\/.OBA=-(l^Q)'

F= log h + log Ijp.

log cot A.

TKIGONOMETRY.

52 |j2

=

log 240 log tan

= 240

^C

tan J

2.38021

=9.86126

C.



TEACHERS EDITION.

tani)^0=—

c

he

= log J c +logtan 54°. = 0.56916 = 10.13874 = 0.70790

log h

logjc log tan 54° log A

p = ic X log

2 n.

F= log jc+log n+log h. =0.56916

logjc log n

= 0.69897 = 0.70790

log h logi?'

=1.97603

F

= 94.63.

16.

The area of an inscribed

ular pentagon

331.8;

is

reg-

find the

area of a regular polygon of 11 sides

same

inscribed in the

Let

AB be

circle.

a side of a regular in-

scribed pentagon,

and

AD the side

of a regular inscribed polygon of 11 sides.

Let

a be

the radius of the circle

whose centre is 0, and h and h^ the apothems of the 2 polygons, respectively.

Given

=

F

the area

Find

331.8.

F\

of pentagon

the area of 11-

sided polygon.

Let p and p^ and

c

and

c' repre-

sent the perimeters and sides of the

pentagon and 11-sided polygon, spectively.

F== Iph. 331.8

= hph,

ph = h

663.6.

663.6

P

re-

=

54

TEIGONOMETRY.

;

TEACHERS EDITION. log r log cos J C^

log

= 0.75703 - 9.99040 = 0.74743

ic^ — = sm -

r

2

J c^ = r X sin J

=0.75703

log r

log sin

ia = 9.31788

log ^c^

=0.07491

log

C\

F= log J c^+ log n + log h^.

log

= 0.07491 = 1.17609 = 0.74743

F

= 99.640.

log log 15

1.99843

19. A regular dodecagon is circumscribed about a circle, the circumference of which is equal to 1 find the perimeter of the dodecagon.

Given circumference of inscribed

= 1, n=12; 2 Trr r

find p.

= circumference. = circ.

55

TRIGONOMETRY.

56

Page

Exercise IX.

36.

1. Construct the functions of an 239° is in Quadrant III. angle in Quadrant II. What are sin = — tan = +

their signs

cos = —

?

cot

=

-f

sec

=—

esc

=—

Sines and tangents extending up-

wards from horizontal diameter are 145° is in Quadrant II. downwards, negative. Cosin = tan = — sines and cotangents extending from cos = — cot = — vertical diameter towards the right positive

=— CSC =

;

sec

-t-

are positive

are

;

towards the

left,

nega-

Signs of secant and cosecant

tive.

made

to agree

sine, respectively.

sin

cos

and and

400

= 360°

= signs

40°

-f

-f-

of func-

tions of 40°.

with cosine and Hence, 40°

sec are

in

Quadrant

— —

700°

I.

tan = -f cot = +

=+ cos = +

esc are -f

tan and cot are

is

sin

= 360° -f

340°

=+ CSC = sec

-t-

= signs

of the

functions of 340°.

2. Construct the functions of an angle in Quadrant III. What are 340°

their signs

?

sin

— are —

sin

and

esc are

cos

and

sec

tan and

cot are

cos

is

=— =+

1200°

-h

Quadrant IV.

in

tan

=

cot

3

X

=— =—

360°

sec esc

+

120°

=

=+ =— signs

of the functions of 120°. 3.

Construct the functions of an

angle in

What

Quadrant IV.

their signs

are

?



sin

and

esc are

cos

and

sec are

+

tan and

cot are



120^

is

in

Quadrant

=

-h

tan

=—

sec

=—

cos

--=



cot

=—

CSC

=+

3800°

=

10

X

360°

is

in

Quadrant

the

sin

functions of the following angles 340°, 239°, 145°, 400°, 700°, 1200°,

cos

=— =—

5.

How many

What

are

the signs

of

:

3800°

?

340° sin

cos

is

in

=— =+

Quadrant IV. tan cot

=— =—

+

200°

signs

of the functions of 200°.

200° 4.

II.

sin

=+ — = esc sec

tan cot

III.

= -f =+

sec CSC

=— =—

angles less than

360° have the value of the sine equal to -I- f, and in what quadrants 'do they lie?

.

TEACHERS EDITION. Since the sine angles can

lie in

57

.•. two values, one in Quadrant is +, by § 24, the but two quadrants, and one in Quadrant III.

I.

first and second. (v.) Sign being — the angle can In the first quadrant, by | 3, the be in Quadrant II. or IV. sine increases from to 1, and in .•. two values, one in Quadrant II. the second, decreases from 1 to 0. and one in Quadrant IV. This is a continually increasing and

the

,

what

limits must the cosx = — |? if cot a; angle whose sine is equal to + f in = 4? if sec a; = 80? ifcsca; = -3? each quadrant, the first and second. {x to be less than 360°.)

decreasing quantity.

8.

Therefore there can be but one

"Within

angle x

lie

if

If cos X = — f X must lie in the values less than second or third quadrant, or between 720° can the angle x have if cos x 90° and 270°. ,

6.

=

How many

+f, and

they

what quadrants do

in

720°

is

If cot

a;

= 4,

90°, or 180°

lie ?

twice

moving radius

360°;

will

hence the

make

If sec

a;

X is between 0° and and 270°.

= 80,

a;

is

between 0° and

exactly 2 90° or 270° and 360°.

complete revolutions. If CSC a; = — 3, a; is between 180° The cosine has the + sign in the and 360°. first and fourth quadrants, hence it 9. In what quadrant does an two in Quadwill have four values angle lie if sine and cosine are both rant I. and two in Quadrant IV. negative ? if cosine and tangent are 7. If we take into account only both negative ? if the cotangent is angles less than 180°, how many positive and the sine negative? :

values can x have cos

=

a;

= ^?

if

f? ifcotaj

cos x

if

sin

a;

=—|?

= if

(i.) Sine is negative in Quadrants f ? if tan x II, and III. cosine is negative in ;

= -7?

Quadrants III. and IV. .•. angles having both sine and angle being the can (i.) Sign +, cosine negative are in Quadrant be in Quadrant I. or II. III. .-. two values, one in Quadrant I. (ii.) Cosine is negative in Quadand one in Quadrant II. rants II. and III. tangent is nega(ii.) Sign being -f, the angle is in tive in quadrants II. and IV. Quadrant I. or IV. .•. angles having both cosine and .•. two values, one in Quadrant I. tangent negative are in Quadrant and one in Quadrant IV. ;

(iii.)

Sign being



II. ,

the angle can

(iii.) Cotangent is positive in Quadrants I. and III. sine is neg.•. two values, one in Quadrant II. ative in Quadrants III. and IV. and one in Quadrant III. .'. angles having cotangent posithe tive and sine negative are in Quadbeing angle can (iv.) Sign +, rant III. be in Quadrant I. or III.

be in Quadrant

II. or III.

;

TRIGONOMETRY.

58

Between 0° and 3600° how many angles are there whose sines have the absolute value f ? Of 10.

cot X

=

= tan X

—=—

—1

1.

how many are positive 13. Given tana;= V3; find the and how many negative ? other functions when x is an angle Between 0° and 3600° there are in Quadrant III. 10 revolutions, and in each there tana3= VS. are 4 angles whose sines have the these sines

absolute value

The

angles.

.*.

f.

sine

are

40

positive

in

there

is

Quadrants I. and II., and negative ing Quadrants III. and IV. .•. there are 20 angles with the sine positive, and 20 with the sine negative. 11.

cot X

tancc

tan X

Vs

In finding cos x by means of cos x = ± Vl — sin^ x,

3

when must we choose the positive sign and when the negative sign ? Since cosines only of angles in I. or IV. are positive, we use the sign + only when angle x

within these limits.

4

Also, since cosines of angles in II. and III. are nega-

we known to

use the sign

tive,

12.

lie in either

Given cos a;

in

Quadrant sin^x sin X

esc

X

sec x

— when ,

x

is

;

find the

1.

= Vl — cos^o; = Vl - {-VlY =

11/9 =— =

sm

r:

x

VJ.

"v^-

V^

= -V2.

= cos 03

tan 05 =

sin^^_Vj_ ^ _ cos

a;

is

an angle

II.

+ cos^a; =

=

x

of these.

= - V|

when

other functions

cos

—VI

1

X a;

sin

X

cos

a;

cos x

= sin x.

= sin x.

— sin^a; = cos^x + sin^a; = = cos^a;

cos%

1

1

±i

cos X

The angle being the cosine

Quadrants

^y/S.

cos'^a;

Quadrants

lies

—=

-

V3

equation

the

=

.".

cos X

is

in

Quadrant

negative.

III.

TEACHEES EDITION. cos X

= sec

sma;

a;

^

= - f V3, a;

=

tana;

=

CSC

cot

a;

49

>'49

59

:

TRIGONOMETRY.

60 negative value

When

its cotangent. 0° or 360°, co-

of

the angle

is

tangent is parallel to the horizontal diameter and cannot meet it. But cotangent 360° may be regarded as extending either in the positive

or in the negative

hence either 19.

+

direction

— oo

or

oo

;

and

.

Obtain by means of Formu-

the angles given (i.)

90°

tan

cos 180°

(iii.)

cot 270°

(iv.)

esc 360°

= oo. = - 1. = 0. = - 00.

cot 90°

tan 270°

= - = oo.

cos 270° 0.

sm

270°

=

= 0. sin2 270°-hcos2 270° = l. = l. sin2 270° + sin2 270° = l. sin 270° = - 1. sin 270°

CSC 360°

= - oo.

sin 360°

=



sin2 360°

+

cos2

= oo=l. =~ CO

cos2

cos

sin 90°

cos 90° cos 90°

= 0.

(IV.)

(i-)

tan90°

cot 270°

cos 270°

las [l]-[3] the other functions of

(ii.)

(ill-)

— 00

= - 0. 360°

= l.

= l. 360° = 1. 360°

^=-

tan 360°

=

cot 360°

= -!- = - 00.

0.

-0 sin 90° = 0.

cos2 90°

+

sin^

90°

=

1.

= 1. 90° = 1.

-0

sin2 90°

sin

20. Find the values of sin 450°, tan 540°, cos 630°, cot 720°, sin 810°,

(ii.)

cos 180° sin2

180°

sin2

180°

sin 180°

tan 180°

CSC 900°.

= -1. + +

cos2 180° 1

= 1.

= 0. sin 180°

cos 180°

-1

= -0. cot 180°

= cos 180° _ - 1 sin 180°

= sin (360° + 90°) = sin 90° = 1. tan 540° = tan (360° + 180°) = tan 180° = 0. 630° = cos (360° + 270°) cos = cos 270° sin 450°

= 1.

=

0.

TEACHERS EDITION. cot 720°

sin 810°

esc

900°

= cot (360° + = cot 360° = 00.

360°)

Substituting,

axO + 6xO-cxO=0.

= sin (2 x 360° + = sin 90° = 1.

Compute the value of a cos 90° - h tan 180° + c cot 90°.

23.

90°)

= 0. tan 180° = 0. cos 90°

= esc (2 x 360° +180°) = CSC 180°

cot 90°

ax0-6x0 + cx0 = 0.

21. For what angle in each quadrant are the absolute values of

the sine and cosine alike sine

24.

45°),

?

and cosine of 45° are

+

(270°

45°),

sin

+

45°)

cos

Hence the

sines

and

cosines

of 45°, 135°, 225°, 315°,

etc.,

are all

cos

Compute the value

a sin 0° +

5 cos 90°

25.

180°.

Compute the value

(a2-52)cos 360°- 4 ah

of

sin 270°.

= 1. 270° = - 1.

cos 360°

of

- c tan 180°.

sin

= 0. cos 90° = 0. tan 180° = 0.

sin 0°

Substituting,

(a2-52)xl-4a&X-l

= a2-62 + 4a5. Exercise X.

2.

of

axl-6xl+(a-5)x-l = 0.

equal in absolute value. 22.

- 5 cos 360° + (a - 6) cos 90° = 1. 360° = 1. 180° = - 1.

Substituting,

in

the second, third, and fourth quadrants.

Compute the value

a sin 90°

Correequal in absolute value. sponding to the angle of 45° in the first quadrant are the angles (90° +

(180°

=0.

Substituting,

= 00.

The

61

Page

41.

cos 100°

Express sin 172° in terms of

the functions of angles less than

= cos (90° + 10°) = - sin 10°.

45°.

sin 172°

= sin

(180°

= sin 8°.

- 8°) 4.

Express tan 125° in terms of of angles less than

the functions

Express cos 100° in terms of 45°. the functions of angles less than 3.

45°.

tan 125°

= tan (90° - 35°) = - cot 35°.

TRIGONOMETRY.

62

Express cot 91° in terms of

5.

Express

13.

the functions of angles less than the functions

271° in terms of less than

45°.

45°.

cot 91°

6.

esc

of angles

= cot (90° + = - tan 1°.

CSC 271°

1°)

= CSC (270° - 1°) = -secl°.

Express sec 110° in terms of 14. Express sin 163° 49'' in terms of angles less than of the functions of angles less than

the functions 45°.

sec 110°

7.

Express

the functions

= sec (90° + = - CSC 20°.

45°.

20°)

sin 163°

less

than

45°. CSC 157°

8.

= esc (180° -23°) = CSC 23°.

Express sin 204° in terms of of angles less than

the functions 45°.

sin 204°

sin

= sin

esc 157° in terms of

of angles

49^=

15.

(180°- 16° 110 16° IV.

Express cos 195° 33^ in terms

of the functions of angles less than 45°.

cos 195°

33^=

cos (180°+ 15°

= - cos

16. Express tan 269° 15^ in terms

than

of the functions of angles less

= sin (180° + 24°) = - sin 24°.

33^

15° 33^

45°.

tan 269° 15^= tan (270°- 450

= cot45^ Express cos 359° in terms of the functions of angles less than 9.

17.

Express cot 139° 17^

in

terms

of the functions of angles less than

45°.

cos 359°

= cos (360° - 1°) = cos 1°.

45°.

cot 139° 17^= cot (180°- 40°

430

= - cot 40° 43^ 10.

Express tan 300° in terms of of angles less than

the functions 45°.

tan 300°

= tan (270° + 30°) = - cot 30°.

18.

Express sec 299°

45''

in terms

of the functions of angles less than 45°.

sec 299°

45^=

sec (270°+ 29°

450

= CSC 29° 45^. 11. Express cot 264° in terms of the functions of angles less than 45°.

cot 264°

= cot (270° -6°) = tan 6°.

19.

Express esc 92°

25''

in terms

of the functions of angles less than 45°. esc 92°

25^=

CSC

(90°+ 2° 250

= sec 2° 25^

Express sec 244° in terms of the functions of angles less than 12.

20. Express all the functions of

45°. sec 244°

= sec (270° -26°) = -csc26°.

— 75°

in terms of those of positive angles less than 45°.

TEACHERS EDITION,

= sin (270° + = - cos 15°. cos (- 75°) = cos (270° + = sin 15°. sin

(-

tan(-

75°)

75°)

=

tan (270°

+

15°)

Express all the functions of in terms of those of positive angles less than 45°. 24.

— 52° 37''

15°)

sin

15°)

= - cot 15°. cot (- 75°) = cot (270° + 15°) = - tan 15°. Express all the functions of in terms of those of positive angles less than 45°. 21.

— 127°

= sin (270° - 37°) = - cos 37°. cos (- 127°) = cos (270° - 37°) = - sin 37°. tan (- 127°) = tan (270° - 37°) = cot 37°. cot (- 127°) = cot (270° - 37°) = tan 37°. sin

(- 52° 370

tan (- 52°

370 = tan (270°+ 37° 230

= - cot 37° 23^. cot (- 52° 370 = cot (270°+ 37° 230 = -tan37°23^

(- 127°)

Express all the functions of in terms of those of positive angles less than 45°. 25.

— 196° 54-^

= sin (180°-16°540 = sin 16° 54^ cos (- 196° 540 = cos (180°-16° 540 = - cos 16° 54^, tan (- 196° 540 = tan (180°-16° 540 sin

(- 196° 540

Express all the functions of — 200° in terms of those of positive cot (- 196° 540 angles less than 45°.

= sin (180° - 20°) = sin 20°. cos (- 200°) = cos (180° - 20°) = - cos 20°.

= -tanl6°54^ = cot (180°-16° 540 = -cotl6°54^

(- 200°)

= tan (180° - 20°) = -tan20°. cot (- 200°) = cot (180° - 20°) = - cot 20°. tan (- 200°)

Express all the functions of 345° in terms of those of positive angles less than 45°. 23.



sin

= sin (270°- 37° 23^

= - cos 37° 23^ cos (- 52° 370 = cos (270°+ 37° 23^ = sin 37° 23^

22.

sin

63

(- 345°)

= sin

15°, etc.

26. Find the functions of 120°. sin 120°

= sin (90° + = |V3.

30°)

= cos 30°

= cos (90° + 30°) = - sin 30° = - J. tan 120° = tan (90° + 30°) = - tan 30° = -Vs. cot 120° = cot (90° + 30°) = -cot30° = -^V3. sec 120° = - 2. CSC 120° = f Vs. cos 120°

TRIGONOMETRY.

64 27.

Find the functions of 135°.

sin 135°

= sin

cos 45°

cos 135°

tan 135°

+

(90°

=

45°)

I V2.

= cos (90° + 45°) = -sin45° = - jVi

= sin

135°

cos 135°

cotl35°

= ^"^^^^° = -l. sin 135°

sec 135°

^— = - \/2. V2.

Find the functions of 150°.

= sin = sin cos 150° = COS sin 150°

(180°

30°

- 30°)

= J.

- 30°) = -cos30° = -jV3. tanl50° = tan(180°-30°) (180°

= -tan30° =

- cos 30°

cot

sin 30°

= -V3. = sec

(180°

= - sec

30°

- 30°) =

= sin (180° + 45°) = -sin45° = -|\/2. 225° = cos (180° + 45°) cos = -cos45° = - J\/2. tan 225° = tan (180° + 45°) = tan 45° = 1. cot 225° = cot (180° + 45°) = cot45° = l. 31. sin

(180°

= CSC

30°

Find the functions of 240°.

240°= sin

(270°

- 30°)

= -cos30° = -jV3. cos 240° = cos (270° - 30°) = - sin 30° = -h tan 240° = tan (270° -30°) = cot 30° = Vs. cot 240° = cot (270° - 30°) = tan 30° = ^ Vs. 32.

= CSC

- 30°)

= sin 30°

= 2.

Find the functions of 225°.

- cos 30°

= -fV3. CSC 150°

30.

sin 30°

= -iV3. cot 150° = cot (180° - 30°) - cos 30° 30° = =-

sec 150°

= sin (180° + 30°) = - sin 30° = - |. cos 210° = cos (180° + 30°) = -cos30° = -A\/3. 210° = tan (180° + 30°) tan = tan30° = J\/3. cot 210° = cot (180° + 30°) = cot 30° = V3. sin 210°

sin 225°

1

=

sin 135°

28.

Find the functions of 210°.

1

=

cos 135° CSC 135°

29.

Find the functions of 300°.

= sin (270° + 30°) = -cos30° = -jV3. cos 300° = cos (270° + 30°)

sin 300°

1

2-

TEACHERS EDITION. tan

300°= tan (270° +

cot 300°

sin 225^

30°)

= - cot 30° = - V3. = cot (270° + 30°) = -tan30°=-jV3.

Find the functions of - 30°. 30° = - sin 30° = - i. sin cos - 30° = cos 30° = J Vs. = 30° tan -tan30° = -^V'3. 33.

cot sec esc

- 30° = - cot 30° = - Va. - 30° = sec 30° = |V3. - 30° = - CSC 30° = - 2. Find the functions of -225°.

34,

- 225° = 90° + 45°. - 225° = sin (90° + 45°) = cos 45° = \V2. 225° = cos (90° + 45°) cos = - sin 45° = ~ I V2. tan - 225° = tan (90° + 45°) = - cot 45° = - 1. 225° = cot cot (90° + 45°) = - tan 45° = - 1. sin

sec

1

- 225° =

+

cos (90°

CSC

- 225°

sin (90°

Given

35.

negative of

X,

;

45°)

= -V2. 1 =— sin

a;

+ 45°)

= —Vl,

=V2.

and cos a?

find the other functions

and the value of

x.

Since sin 45° == V|, and the signs of both the sine and cosine are negative, the angle III.,

and must

180°

+ 45° =

must be

in

Quadrant

be, therefore,

225°.

Then cos45°=\/J. Hence cos (180° + 45°)

65

= - VJ.

TKIGONOMETBY.

66

Find the functions of 3540°.

37.

in

smg00^ ^

-|V3

sign in

i

1

1

tan 300°

_v^

cot 300°

= V3

and the

negative, the angle must be

Quadrant

II. or IV.,

and must

=

What

40.

values of » between O*' satisfy the equation

and 720° will sin X = 4r 2?

1

= - = 2L €Os3(X>'^

Since cot 30°

is

be therefore 180° - 30° 150°, or 360° - 30° = 330°, or - 30°. Hence the angles are 150° or — 30°.

-|V3. secSCKT

are 135°, 225°, or

-225°. (ii.)

cos SOO'*

and must

II. or III.,

Hence the angles

2 tan 300^ =

Quadrant

be therefore 180° - 45° = 135°, or 180° + 45° = 225°. Also, the functions of — 225° are the same as the functions of 360° - 225° = 135°.

= 9 X 360° + 300°. sin 300° = sin {S&)P - m^} = sin 60° = - 1 VS. cos aOO^' = cos (360° - 60°) cos 60^ = i. 3540«

i

= -| and the sign is the angle must be in Quad-

Since sin 30°

esemF = sin 300*^

positive,,

^V3

rant

I.

or

II.,

and must be therefore

180°- 30°

30°, or

=

150°, the first

In the second revoluthese angles must be increased

revolution.

Sa What equal to (i.)

— V3

^aee

^an

angles less

have a sine equal to

—J?

360°'

and 510°.

150°, 390°.

?

30^= J and the

sin

tion,

a tangent by 360°. Hence the angles are 30°, sign

angle nrast be in 41. In each of the following eases Qnadraat III. or IV., and mnst be find the other angle between 0° and therefore 180° + 30° = 210°, or 360° 360° for which the corresponding is

negative,

tlie

-30° = 330°.

function (sign included)

Since tan 60°

=V3

the

has

and the same value sin 12°, cos 26°, tan 45°, sign is negative, the angle must be cot 72° sin 191°, cos 120°, tan 244°, in Quadrant II. or IV., and must cot 357°. (ii.)

:

;

be therefore 180°-60° 360° -60° = 300°.

Which

= 12CP,

or

sin 12°

mentioned in Examples 27-34 have a 39.

of the angles

cosine equal to

equal to (i.)

sign

— V3 ?

Since

is

In order that the sign shall be the same,

— VJ?

must be in Quadrant

= sin(lSO^-

12°)

II.

= sin

168°.

26° miist be in Quadrant IV. a cotangent cos 26°) cos 334°. cos (360°

cos45°=V^ and

=

-

=

the tan 45° must be in Quadrant III. = tan (180° + 45°) = taa 225^

negative, the angle must be

TEACHERS EDITION. cot 72°

must be

Quadrant

in

= cot (180° + sin 191°

must be

= sin cos 120°

(360°

in

= cot

(180°

in

+

III.

252°.

Quadrant IV.

- 11°) = sin

must be

= cos

72°)

349°.

Quadrant

60°)

=

III.

cos 240°.

tan 244° must be in Quadrant

I.

= tan (244° - 180°) = tan 64°. cot 357°

must be

= cot 42.

(357°

in

Quadrant

II.

- 180°) = cot

Given tan 238°

=

177°.

find

1.6;

sin 122°.

tan 238°

= tan (180° +

58°)

-tan 58°.

= sin (180° - 58°) = sin 58°. 238° = 1.6. tan tan 58° = 1.6.

sin 122° ,

But .-.

tan 58°

= sin

58°

cos 58° sin

58°

1

Vi-sin258° 2.56

- 2.56 sin2 58° = sin2 58°.

3.56 sin2 58°

sm

58°

= 2.56. = -\/ ^'3.56

= 43.

0.848.

Given cos 333°

= 0.89

tan 117°.

= 0.89. = cos (270° + 63°) = sin 63° = tan (180° -63°) = - tan 63°. Bin2 63° + cos2 63° = 1. (0.89)2 + cos2 63° = 1. cos 333°

;

find

cos2 63°

67

=

0.2079.

TRIGONOMETRY.

68

example

sin (180°

+ x) = — cos X. —y) = — sin y. + x)^ — sin x.

sin (270°

— y) = — cos y.

sine increases in value,

COS (180° cos (270°

Hence

As X

+

tan (—

3/.

is

-tan

2/)

=—

tan

(180° -3/)

1/.

=

tan

Hence the expression

— cos x.

increases from 0° to 45°, the

and cosine

to this

point sin

= cosine. .r

— cos

it

For the remainder of sine is greater than co-

negative.

Quadrant I. and consequently the expression sin X — cos X is positive. In Quadrant II. sine is positive and sine,

— tan (180° — y).

tan (— y)

the question of last

for sin x

Hence up

Simplify the expression

tan x

Answer

decreases, until at 45° sine

the expression

= cos X sin y — sin x cos 50.

52.

cosine negative, so the expression 2/.

=

tan

x.

— cos X

uniformly positive. is negative and cosine negative hence, so long the as sine is less than cosine, the exsin X

is

In Quadrant III. sine ;

For what values of x is expression sin x + cos x positive, pression is positive, viz., to 225°; and for what values negative ? Rep- after that point, sine is greater than resent the result by a drawing in cosine, and sin x — cos x is negative. which the sectors corresponding to In Quadrant IV. sine is negative the negative values are shaded. and cosine positive therefore sin x The If X be any angle in Quadrant I., — cos a; is uniformly negative. sin X + cos X must be positive since expression is, then, negative beboth the sine and cosine are posi- tween 0° and 45°, and 225° and In Quadrant II. the sine is 360°; positive between 45° and tive. positive and cosine negative hence, 225°. 51.

:

;

so long as the sine

is

greater than,

53.

or equal to, the cosine, the expres-

sion

sin

a?

-f

cos

re

after passing the

rant

Zx

is

II., viz.,

is

positive;

but (x

middle of Quad- ^^^-

135°, the cosine of

negative.

III. both sine

pression

sin X

+ cos X

is

X- 90° = 360° - (90° - x)

sin {x

In Quadrant and cosine are negative, and hence their sum must be In Quadrant IV. the negative. sine is negative and cosine positive. The sine and cosine are equal at 315°, after which the cosine is greater than sine. Hence the exis

in terms of the functions

= 270° -f X. - 90°) - sin (270° + x) = — cos X. cos {x - 90°) - cos (270° x)

greater than sine, and the ex-

pression

Find the functions of

— 90°)

-1-

= sin X. tan {x - 90°) - tan (270° -f x) = — cot X. cot {x - 90°) = cot (270° + x) = — tan X.

negative

Find the functions of

from 135° to 315°, and positive between 0° and 135°, and 315° and

{x

— 180°)

360°.

of

cc.

54.

in terms of the functions

69

TEACHERS EDITION.

= — cos X. - 180°) = tan (180° - x) tan = tan X. cot {x - 180°) = cot (180° + x) = cot X.

- 180° = 360° - (180° - X) = 180° + X. sin {x - 180°) = sin (180° + x) = — sin X. cos {x - 180°) = cos (180° + x) X

(a;

Page

48.

sin (90°

+ y)

Exercise XI. Find the value of

1.

and

cos {x

+ y) when

=

sin

-tV. cosy

f,

sin (x

2/

sin

sin {x

= |,

a?

+ y) cos x

= sin 90° cos y + cos 90° siny

12

= (1 Xcosy) + (Oxsiny) = cos y.

13-

= sin x cos y + cos x sin y

+ y)

cos (90°

'5^13 + 5^13

cos

(a?

+ 3/) =

36

20

_ 56^

65

65

65*

cos X cos



(tan 90°



sin x sin

2.

Find

15

33

65

65

65"

sin (90°

— y)

-y) by making Formulas [8] and [9].

a;

= and

cos

= 90°

— cos 90° cos 90° = 0.

cos

y

in

4.

the

+ y)



-,

sin y.

= (0 X cos y) + (1 X sin y) = sin y.

sin

V ^ cosy

3.

Find, by Formulas [4H11], four functions of 90° + y.

first

= — tan y. ,

by Formulas

[4]-[ll],

four functions of 180°

— y.

- y) = sin 180° cosy — cos 180° siny = (0 X cos y) — (— 1 X sin y) = sin y, cos (180° - y) = cos 180° cos y + sin 180° sin y = (— 1 X cos y) + (0 X sin y)

= — cosy. tan (180° - y) =

^ cosy

cot (180°

the

,

+ y)

Find, first

= — cot y.

sin (180°

= 1. sin (90° - y) = (1 X cosy) — (0 X sin y) = cos y. cos (90° - y) = cos 90° cos y + sin 90° sin y

sin 90°

y)

cos y ^ sin y

cot (90°

- y)

= sin 90° .-.

(5^13

48

(90°

sin (90°

1/

=

"'5^13)

+

= cos 90° cos y — sin 90° sin y = (0 X cos y) — (1 X sin y) = — sin y.

=

= — tan y.

- y)

—V^ = — cot y.

cos ;

sin

,

y

TRIGONOMETEY.

70 Find, by Formulas

5.

the

first

[4]-[ll],

four functions of 180°

sin (180°

= cos 270° cos y — sin 270° sin y = (0 X cos 2/) — (— 1 X sin y) = sin y.

+ y)

= sin 180° cos y + = (0 X cos y) + = — sin y.

(-

cos 180° sin 1

X

y

sin y)

+ y)

cos (270°

+ y.

+ y)

tan (270°

— cosy^ = — =— :

cos (180°

sm y

+ y)

= cos 180° cos y — sin 180° sin y = (— 1 X cos — (0 X sin y) = — cos y. tan (180°

+ y)

= — sin ^v = — cosy

=

cot (180°

tan y.

V "^

:

Find, by Formulas [4]-[ll], the first four functions of 270° — y.

cos (360°

6.

- y) = sin 270° cos y — cos 270° sin y = (— 1 X cos — (0 X sin y) = — cos y. cos (270° - y) = cos 270° cos y + sin 270° sin y = (0 X cos + (- 1 X sin y) = — sin y.

- y) — sin v = =— -^

cosy

=

— —

= — cot y.

r-"^

sin

the

by Formulas

Find,

first

y.

sin (360°

+

+

y.

y)

2/.

[4]-[ll],

four functions of 270°

sin (270°

+

= sin 360° cos y + cos 360° sin y = (0 X cos 2/) + (1 X sin y) = sin cos (360°

by Formulas

[4]-[ll],

four functions of 360°

2/

Find,

,

2/

.

= :i^iM = tan2/. — cos

first

,

tan y.

cot (360° -2/) cos y

9.

tan (270° -2/)

- y)

2/.

2/)

;

— y.

- y)

tan (360°

2/)

— sin y cot (270° - y)

[4]-[ll],

= cos 360° cos y + sin 360° sin y = (1 X cos 2/) + (0 X sin y) = cos

sin (270°

the

by Formulas

= sin 360° cos y - cos 360° sin y = (0 X cos 2/) — (1 X sin y) = — sin y.

+ y) ,

7.

i.

four functions of 360°

sin (360°

—v^ = cot = — cos

= — tan y.

— cos y

first

—^y = cot y. = — cos — sin y



sin

Find,

8.

the

,

+ y)

cot (270°

2/)

,

cot y.

+ y.

y)

= sin 270° cos y + cos 270° sin y = (- 1 X cos 2/) + (0 X sin y) = — cos y.

+ y)

= cos 360° cos y — sin 360° sin y = (1 X cos y) — {Ox sin y) = cos y. tan (360° +2/)

_ sm_y ^ ^^^ ^^ cos

2/

TEACHERS EDITION. cot (360°

=

+

sin

y)

—^ = cot

cos y —

,

siny

first

-

270°)

= sin X cos 270° — cos x sin 270° = sin X — cos X (— 1) = cos X. - 270°) cos = cos X cos 270° + sin x sin 270° = cos X + sin x (— 1) = — sin X. a;

a;

Find, by Formulas [4]-[ll],

10.

the

y.

(a;

1

four functions of x

— 90°.

- 90°) = sin X cos 90° — cos x sin 90° = (0 X sin — (1 X cos x) = — cos X.

sin {x

(a;

a;

a;)

cos (x

tan

-270°)

(a;

cos X

- 90°)

= + = (0 X cos x) +{lx sin x) = sin X. - 90°) tan — cos = —

sin x sin 90°

cos X cos 90°

= — cot X. — sm X - 270°) cot — _ sin X _ — (a;

tan

a;.

cos X

(a;

a;

cot X.

13.

sin X

cot {x

_

- 90°) sin X

— cosx 11.

the

the

sin {x

four functions of

by Formulas

four functions of

[4]-[ll],

— y.

- y) = sin 0° cos y — cos 0° sin y = (0 X cos y) — (1 X sin y) = — sin y. cos (0° - y) = cos 0° cos y + sin 0° sin y = (1 X cos 2/) + (0 X sin y) = cos y. sin (0°

= — tan X.

Find, by Formulas [4]-[ll],

first

Find,

first

a;

— 180°.

- 180°)

= sin x cos 180° — cos x sin 180° = sin x (— 1) — cos X = — sin X. - 180°) cos = cos X cos 180° + sin x sin 180° = cos X (— 1) + sin X a;

tan(0°-3/)

(a;

= — sin ^V = — tan y. .

cosy

a;

= — cos X. - 180°) tan — sin X = — cos X - 180°) cot — cos X

cot(0°-y)

=

(a;

tan

14.

the

12.

Find,

first

y -"^

by Formulas

Find,

first

= — cot v. ,

[4]-[ll],

four functions of a;— 270°.

by Formulas

[4]-[ll],

four functions of 45°

— y.

— y) = sin 45° cos y — cos 45° sin y = 2^V2 cos y — ^\/2 siny = ^ V2 (cos y — sin y).

sin (45°

a;.

sin X

the

cos

X.

(a;

cot



— siny

72

TRIGONOMETEY.

— y) = cos 45° cos y + sin 45° siny = |V2 cos + ^ y/2 sin y = \yf2 (cos + sin y). tan (45° - y) _ cos y — sin y _ 1 — tan y COS (45°

2/

2/

cos

cot (45°

y +

sin

1

3/

+

+

tan (30°

^

^ V3

_

1

tan y

tan y

+ y)

_ V3

_ cos y + sin y _ cot y + 1 cos y — sin y cot y — 1

+

— jV3 tany

cot (30°

- y)

y)

_ cos y + \/3 sin y Vo cos y — sin y divide each term by VS cos y,

cos

y

— sin y by

divide each term 15.

the

Find,

first

by Formulas

sin (45°

_

+ y)

cos

+ y) y + sin y _

1

cos

y — sin y

1 — tan y

cot (45°

17.

the

the

Find,

first

sin

4-

coty +

y

by Formulas

+

cos y

+

[4] -[11],

+ y. y

= \ (cos y + \/3 sin y). cos (30°

+ y)

= cos 30° cos y — sin 30° sin y

= J ( V3 cos y — sin y).

— y.

cos

y

y — sin y

+ V3

sin

y

_ V3 — tan y 1 + VS tan y

1

cos 30° sin

[4]-[ll].

- y)

_ Vs

y)

= sin 30°

by Formulas

- y) = sin 60° cos y — cos 60° sin y — K"^ cos y — sin y). cos (60° - y) = cos 60° cos y + sin 60° sin y = 2 (cos y + \/3 sin y).

cos

four functions of 30°

sin (30°

VS

four functions of 60°

cot (60°

16.

—1

sin (60°

+ y) y

Find,

first

tan (60°

+ tan y

_ cos y — sin y _ cot y — 1 cos

sin y,

+ y)

= cos 45° cos y — sin 45° sin y 5= J V2 cos y — ^\/2 sin y = J V2 (cos y — sin y). tan (45°

"V^ cot y

coty +

+ y.

= sin 45° cos y + cos 45° sin y = iV2 cosy + jVlsiny = J V2 (cos y + sin y). cos (45°

=

[4]-[ll],

four functions of 45°

.

VSsiny

cosy +

-y)

_ cos y + VB sin y VS cos y — sin y _ ^V3coty + 1 cot y — \ Vs 18. sin

Find

3x =

sin 3 a; in

sin (2a;

= sin 2

a;

+

terms of sin

x.

x)

cos X

+ cos 2 a; since.

TEACHERS EDITION. sin

2x

cos 2 a;

= 2 sin x cos x. = cos^o; — sin^rc.

cot

73

+cosa;

Ja;='Y-

Substituting, sin

3x

=

2 sin re

+

= But

sin X cos^a;

3 sin X cos^aj

cos^a;

— sin^a;.

3

= 1 — sin^a;. 3

a;

= 3 sin x — 3 sin^x — sin'a; = 3 sin x — sin^a;. 4:

+

=

a;

cos X.

^l- cos

— sin^x

Substituting, sin 3

i

V3

cos^a;

cos

1

+

1

— cos X

cos

a;

X

— 3 cos x = 1 + cos X. — 4 cos X = — 2. cosx

= -• 2

19. Find cos 3 a; cos

3x

sin 2 a;

cos 2 a;

in terms of cos a;,

= cos {2x + x) = cos 2 X cos X — sin 2 x sin x. = 2 sin x cos x. = cos^a; — sin^a;.

sin^x

= 1 — cos^x

= 1- 1^3 4

sm

X

4'

-4-iVs.

Substituting,

— sin^a; cos x — 2 sin^x cos x = cos^a; — 3 sin'^a; cos x. sin% = 1 — cos^a;.

cos 3 a; == cos^a;

But

Substituting, cos 3 a;

= cos^a; — 3 cos + 3 cos'a; = 4 cos% — 3 cos x. a;

22. Given and cos^x.

Given tan | a; =

1

;

tan

find cos x.

ix =

^-

a;

1-Va96

=V} + cosa;

1 —cos 1 = 1 + cos X + cos = 1 — cos 2 cos X = 0. cos x = 0.

1-oaVq



a;

= 0.10051 a;.

cos J X

= ^ - + cos X

=^

I'l

21. Given sin

a;.

— cosx

cos X

a;

1

find sin ^ x

= VOM.

+ cosa; 1

;

= 0.2. cos^x = 1 — sin'^x = 1 - 0.04.

sin cos

= 0.2

sin X

cos X

20.

sin x

cot |

a;

= V3

;

+ 0.4 VS

find

= 0.99494.



TRIGONOMETRY.

74 23.

Given cos

and tan

cos 2 sin

a;

= 0.5

;

find cos 2 x

2

2 x. .<;

a;

cos 2a;

^%+V2

= cos'^a; — sin^a;. =

W'-(iy-' =

0.25

Vs.

multiply by

2-V2'

-0.75

_ 2

tan

a;

tan 2 a;

X

COS

a;

1

= \/2- 1 = 0.4142.

2\/3

a;

— tan^a;

1

—3 cot 2 ^

= -V3.

tana;

=

=1

a;

^x

^V2+V2 ;

find the

iV2-\/2

sin X

cos .'.

= cos I sin

Given tan 45° functions of 22° 30^ 24.

(2-V2f

= ^ V(2 - V2)2 X V2 = (1-JV2)XV2

^

2 tan

=

|

\ 4-2

= _ 0.50 = - 1.

= sm

2-V2

I2+V2

a;

= cos X. %va?-x + cos'^a; = 1. sin^a; + sin'^a; = 1. 2sin'^a; = 1. sin^a; = \. = ^ \/2 = cos sin

2-V2

sin X

a;

=

\/2

+1 =

25. Given sin 30° functions of 15°. a;.

sin 30°

= 0.5

;

find the

= 0.5 = -•

sin J a; or sin 22° 30^

_

2.4142.

2

ll-^\/2

= aV2-V2 2 = 0.3827.

cos 30°

=V-^V! = iV3.

sin ^

a;

= ^-

cosa;

cos A a; or cos 22° 30' l

^

+ iV2

sin 15°

2

= jV2-V3 = 0.25885.

= aV2+V2 2 = 0.9239. tan \ x

l-iV^

=

sm 2i''_ * A a;

cosja;

AV2-V2 f 1V2+V2

cos 15°

= -v

\

—^ 2

= iV2 + V3 = 0.96592.

TEACHERS EDITION.

2V3

=

tan 15°

75

2 tan a;

= z sma cos

^1 + ^ 1

2- V3 2 + V3

cos^a;

2

But

+ V3

.-.

1

cos^a;

+

+

tan^a;

+ ^V3

= -1-.

2sina^cosaj

= 2siT^^cos^^

2 sin X cos

=

cos •.

28.

a;

a;

1

^^^13o^sjn33^+sin3_°. cos 33°

+

cos 2

a;

tannic

+

sin-'a;

cos'^aj

15°.

cos 2 a;

= cos^a; — sin^a;.

1- ein^a? cos^a;

1

+

sin^B cos^a;

= cos (x+y) + cos {x—y). by

cos'-^a;

— sin^a; =

2 cos a; cosy

(1)

_ cos% — sin^a;

(2).

cos^a;

tan

a;

cos x.

cos^a?

1

2 sin X cosy

Divide

+

=

18°,

= sin (a;+y) + sin {x—y). (2)

a:

1

cos 3°

Then (1)

2 sin

= 1 — tan^a;

26. Prove that

= y=

1

a?

Prove the formula cos 2

X

1.

iV3

= 2 + V3 = 3.7321.

Let

=

sin^a;

cos^a;

4-3 = 2- \/3 = 0.26799.

-V;

+

_ cos^a; + sin^a;

(2-V3)2

cot 15°

1

a;

cos^j;

2-V3 ^ 2-V3

-42 + V3

+ tan^j; =

;

= sm (a;+y) + sin (a;-y) cos {x+y)

+

sin^a;

_ cos^a; — sin^a; ~ i

+ cos {x—y)

Substitute values of x and y,

= cos^a; — sin^aj.

^^^^go_sjn33^J:_sin3f_ cos 33°

+ cos 3° 29.

Prove the formula

27.

=

sin 2 a;

= 2 sin x cos x.

o a;

tan i

a;

1

+

tan^a;

sin

= 1

2 tan x

sin 2



Prove the formula

tan 2 a;

=

+

a;

cos X

vT^ cos

a?

vr + cos

a;

76

TRIGONOMETRY.

1

1



TEACHERS EDITION.

= ^ \/2 COS + J \/2 sin = 2"\/2 (cos + sin x). Ko — = cos X — sin (45°

cos (7= cos

a;

a;

tc

4-

tan

/

.'.



\

1

x)

+

sin X

By

Dividing numerator and denominator by cos X,

-

tan (45°

a;)

= 1 — tan X 1

cos

=

a?

-.

cos X

[180°- (^ + ^)]

= — cos (A +

A + cos B + cos C + COS B — cos {A + 5).

cos J.

[22],

= 2 cos J (^ + B) cos J (^ - B) — cos (J. + B). By

+ tan X

B).

[17],

= 2 cosK^ + 34. If A, B, C are the angles of a triangle, prove that sin

A + B\n B

-{

sin

C

By

= 4 cos J J. cos ^ ^ cos I C. Bin

=

H^ + B) cos

^-

cos

1(^ +

ButK^ + Then, by

-S)

.'.

+ B) cos | J.

C= cos

[90°

-1{A +

B)]

tan

+

C

are the angles of

a triangle, prove that

A + cos B + cos C = 1 + 4 sin ^ sin J ^ sin | C. -J

tan

tan

B).

C= tan [180° -(^1 + B)] = - tan {A + ^).

A + tan 5

= tan {A + B){1 — tan A tan P) = tan {A + B) .•.

cos

are the angles of

Again,

cos J ^.

= ^mi{A + B). sin A + smB + sin = 4 cos ^ -4 cos ^ ^ cos J C. If ^, 5,

1

B + tan C = tan ^ X tan B X tan C. Since ^ + 5 + (7= 180°,

.-.

4 sin I

(J.

C

C=1S0°-{A+

==

35.

A

[22],

2 cos ^ -4 cos I 5.

cos J

If A, B,

36.

tan

5)].

= But

[23],

a triangle, prove that

= ^^

cos A^-{- cos J5^

.-.

[2cos^(^ + ^)] X [cos i Ia-B)-co& ^{A+B)]-{-h

= (2 sin J C) (2 sin ^ ^ sin ^ 5) + = 1 + 4 sin ^ ^ sin J .B sin ^ C.

{A + 5)

= 2sini(^ + B) [cos ^(^ - B) +

-5)

+

X [2 sin ^ J. sin ^ 5] +

= sin^+sin ^+sin [180°-(^+5)] = sin ^ + sin B + sin {A + B) = 2 sin ^ (^ + B) cos 1{A--B) 2sin

^)

= [2cosH^+^)]

^ + sin j5 + sin C

+

H^ -

B) cos

- 2 cos2 ^ (^ +

— tan {A + ^) tan ^ tan B, tan J. + tan B + tan Q = tan (^ +

^)

- tan {A +

^)

— tan {A + 5) tan J. tan B = - tan {A + 5) tan ^ tan B = tan j4 tan B tan C.

TRIGONOMETRY.

78

C

If A, B,

37.

a triangle, prove

+

cot ^ J.

cos

cot J i?

X

a;

cos a;

2 cos 2 a; 2 sin X cos

cot f C.

J5 + iC=90°,

Since^^ +

2x [13]

sin

^ + cot J C

cot J

= cot J J. X

are the angles of tliat

[12] sin 2

..cotiC=ta,n^{A +

H^

+

cot J J.

cot f

= tan J

40. Change to a form more convenient for logarithmic computation

^ + cot J C

cot X

+ 5) + i{A+ + t&n}{B+C) = tan J ( A + -g) X tan J (^ + C) X tan K^ + QBy substitution, cot -4. + cot J ^ + cot J C = cot^ilX cot ^ 5 X cot J C tan

( J.

C)

cot

form more conlogarithmic computation

Change

+

tan

aj

_ cos X

sin

a;

sin X

cos

a;

sin X cos X

_

2

(cos^a;

2 sin

+ a;

sin^o;)

cos x

2 sin 2

a;

39. Change to a form more convenient for logarithmic computation cot X — tan X.

— tan X _ cos K _ sin X

cot X

sin

a;

cos x

_ cos% — sin% sin X cos a;

y.

a;

= ^^^^^^, a;

sin

y tan?/=^^^^-^J.

[2]

cosy

Adding,

_ cos X cos y + sin x sin y sin

a;

cosy

Substitute for cos x cos ?/-l-sin x sin y its

— y), _ cos (x — y)

equal cos {x

sin X cos

[9]

y

41. Change to a form more convenient for logarithmic computation cot X — tan y. ,

_ cos^a; + sin^g;

tan

cos

to a

venient for cot X + tan X. cot X

+

sin X

2"

38.

a;

2 cot 2 a;,

B),

and cot J ^ = tan + Q^ and cot J J. = tan J (^ + C). .'.

a;

2 cos 2 a;

tany

v = sm ^• cosy

TEACHERS EDITION. 1 1

— cos 2x

1

+

cos

2x

79

'

TBIGONOMETEY.

80

Page

Exercise XII. 1.

What

do the formulas of

§

become when one of the angles right angle

By

36

is

53.

division,

AD _ sin B DB sin A

a

?

B

?iB4 =

^.

sin

A

a

" BD

a

But

What

3.

come when

Formula

does

^ = 90°

when ^-180°? triangle cases

If angle

C is

a right angle,

a -

sin

=

sin

c

.

When

_ sin C _

c

c

A ^

b sin

sin

B

=

_Sines

c;

= c.

and

A

4.

'

DB ^ sin ^ (7 B

b'^

cos

= BC. = AC

A = l.

c=AB. =b—

a

Ba b^AC

AD _ sm^O sin

A = 0°.

c.

B

bisect angle C.

CD

cos

B

b

a

sin

=

A

C

adjacent sides.

CD

A = 90°,

a2

.-.

side into parts proportional to the

Then

— 2bc cos A.

0°,

of a triangle divides the opposite

CD

c^

When A =

Prove by means of the Law of that the bisector of an angle

Let

+

c\

a 2.

b^

is

[26]

= 62 + c2-26c. When A = 180°, cos ^ = - 1. .•.a2 = 62 + c2 + 2Jc.

;

C

c

sin

?

become in each of these

+

a^

.-.

sin

a sin

^ = 0°

does the

1

B sin B a _ sin A = tan A sin B b b

=

a^

C

What

?

Formula

A = sm A

[26] be-

when

?

B

is

c=BA.

=

a

=

b

+

c.

Prove that whether the angle acute or obtuse

What

c

=

a cos

B

two symmetrical formulas obtained by

+

b cos A.

are

the

TEACHERS EDITION. changing the letters? What does the formula become when B = 90° ?

A

81

THIGONOMETRY.

82 The

limit of

^-5

the limit of the

.'.

is

180°.

maximum value

Since

angle

is

C

is

ofH^-^) 180°

= 90°.

(ii.)

2

The /.

limit of

^ + 5 is

the limit of the

maximum value

of^{A + B)

= 1^0! =90° 2

(ii.)

C=90°;

A- B = 90°, and B=0.

a— a + (i.)

A

b

^

tan

^{A — B) + B)

isin^{A

b

When C= 90°. + B = 90°.

B=90°-A.

Q-5^ tann^-(Q0°-^)1 a +

tan 45°

b _^

tan

or

b

(^-45°) 1

= tan (^-45°).

tri-

^-5 = 90°, and 5=a

_ tan ^{A — B)

b

tan ^ ( J.

+ 5)

A + B + 0^180°, A + 2B = 180°

A-B

7. Find the form to which Formula [27] reduces, and describe the nature of the triangle when (i.)

When

a— a +

180°.

a right angle, the

a right triangle.

=90°

;

TEACHERS EDITION. 2.

Given

a= J.

C=

795,

55° 20^

c ==

a

=

663.986.

c

79° 59^

B=

44°

C=

.-.

=

rt

= 2.67111 = 468.93.

log c

795.

^= A-\-B=

a.

colog sin

6=567.688,

B = 44° 4F;

log

= 2.90526 A = 0.00654 log sin Q = 9.75931

log

find

= 79°59^

83

4F

124° 40^ 55° 20'.

4.

Given

find

a = 820, A = 12° 49',

5 =141°

c

a

= 820.

2.90037

^ = 0.00667 log sin B = 9.84707

A=

= 2.75411 = 567.688.

b

12° 49'

^ = 141°

59'

^ + .5 =154° C= 25°

48'

.-,

= 2.90037 colog sin A = 0.00667 log sin C = 9.91512 = 2.82216 log c = 663.986. c log a

3.

a

log

= 2.91381

a

A = 0.65398 log sin B = 9.78950

log 6

=3.36729

b

= 2276.63. =

find

= 804,

C=35°4^ 6 = 577.31, c = 468.93.

^ = 99°55^ ^ = 45° 1'

A = 0.65398

sm

= 9.62918

log

= 3.19697 = 1573.89.

log c

= 804.

A= ^=

99° 55' 45°

V

5.

Giv^n

find

C= 47°

= 1005, A = 78° 19', ^ = 54° 27'; c

A + B = 144° 56' C= 35° 4'. .-.

= 2.90526 colog sin A = 0.00654 log sin B = 9.84961 = 2.76141 log 6 = 577.31. 6 log

2.91381

colog sin

c

a

12'.

colog sin

log a

Given

12',

= 2276.63, = 1573.89.

6

59';

colog sin

log b

C= 25°

c

a

1340.6,

=

1113.8.

,6

= 1005.

^=

78° 19'

B = 54° 27' ^ + ^ = 132° 46' C= 47° 14'. .-.

14',

a=

TRIGONOMETKY.

84 logc

TEACHERS EDITION. In order to determine the disA from a place

9.

tance of a hostile fort

and the angles ABC measured, and found to be 322.55 yards, 60° 3V, and 56° 10^, respectively. Find the disB, a line

and

BC

BCA were

tance

AB. a

=

322.55.

85

86

TRIGONOMETRY.

the results

when

Id" V, and y

= 42°

cZ

=

11.237,

5V.

d= 11.237. x= 19° V 2/= 42° 54^ x

+ y= .-.

z

\ogd colog sin z log sin X

log a

=

61° 55^

118°

5^

= 1.05065 = 0.05440 = 9.51301

x

TEACHERS EDITION. Given

15.

C= 105°

h

=

A = 30°,

7.07107,

a and

find

;

c

87

= ^V2xiV3 + ^V2xi

without

using logarithms.

Let of c

p and

made by

q denote the segments the dropped from C.

a

±

= 9.562 x*V2 (v/6+V2)

5 = 45°. sin A= —

_

xV2

19.124

V6+V2

2 sin

_ (19.124xV2)(\/6-V2) 6-2 = 9.562 (VS-l) = 6.999 = 7.

5 = iV2. a_ i b~ iV2 a

= _b_ V2

b

7

X iVS

sin J.

7.07107

f V.4J

7V3

= 5.

1.41421 cos

= a sin 5

7\/6

2 V2 = 3.5 V6 = 8.573.

^ = |\/3 = 0.86602.

b

P = bx

= 7.07107 X 0.86602 = 6.12369. ?

The base of a triangle is 600 and the angles at the base are 30° and 120°. Find the other sides and the altitude without using log17.

0.86602

= sin 5 = JV2 = 0.70711.

= ax 0.70711 = 5 X 0.70711 = 3.53555. c=p + q = 6.12369 + 3.53555 = 9.65924.

q

feet,

arithms.

AB = 600. A = 30°. 5=120°. .-.

C= 30°. A=C. a 7

16.

Given

B = 60°

c

=

a and

find

;

A = 45°,

9.562, b

without

using logarithms.

= c = 600 _ a sin 5 sin

A

_ 600 X sin (180°- 60°) sin 30°

C= 75°. a

=

e sin

sin

sin

feet.

^ 600x|a/3

A

1

C

a= sin (45° + 30°) = sin 45° cos 30° + cos45°sin30°.

= 600x1.732051 = 1039.2. h = b sin A == 1039.2 X J = 519.6 feet.

TEIGONOMETRY. 18. Two angles of a triangle are, the one 20°, the other 40°. Find

a

out using logarithms.

=

X

20°,

c

=

and a and

5.43775.

=

a sin

X

3

0.9659

0.4226

40'',

= 6.857.

_a

Given one side of a triangle

20. sin

nat sin

y

equal to

a;

nat sin y

a

.-.

C

A

h be opposite sides.

sin X

Then

0.766

0.4226

=

sin 37

X

3

sin J.

the ratio of the opposite sides with-

Let

5

sin

:

6

the

adjacent angles

= 0.3420.

equal each to 30°.

Find the radius

=

0.6428.

of the circumscribed circle without

3420 6428.

using logarithms.

:

:

:

:

27,

:

855

:

2E

1607.

sin^ The angles of a triangle are 5 10 21, and the side opposite

19. as

:

sin

the smallest angle

Find the other

is

sides

equal to

3.

without using

logarithms.

Since the angles A, B,

C

are as

5:10:21,

^ = ^6 ^=10

of 180°

=

Determine the number of solu-

tions in each of the following cases

=

a

80,

a=

but

and .*.

two

6

=

100,

A = 30°.

< 6 100, > 5 sin ^ = 100 X A < 90°.

80

Page

(iii.)

.'.

|,

(iv.)

.'.

a

ft

one solution.

but

40,

6

A< a = 13.4, a

(v.)

59.

90°.

no solution.

solutions.

= 50, = 100, ^ = 30°. a = 50 = 6 sin il = 100 X h

15.588.

= 100, ^ = 30°. a = 40< bsmA^lOOxh =

and

=

.*.

(ii.)

a

:

3

18 Vs.

i2=9V3 =

Exercise XIV.

(i.)

V3

^V3

= 25°. of 180° = 50°. C=|iof 180° = 105°.

1.

A = sin 120°

= sin (180° - 60°) = sin 60°. sin 60° = |\/3. 27 _54 _ 54xV3 •.2i2 =

:

6

= 11.46, ^=77° 20'.

= 13.4 >

5=11.46.

one solution.

a

= 70, 5 = 75, A = 60°. a = 70 < & = 75, >6sin^ = 75xiV3,

;

89

TEACHERS EDITION.

^ = 60° < 90°.

and .*.

(vi.)

two a

=

log a

log sin

solutions.

134.16, b

=

colog sin 84.54,

B = 52° b
.*.

2.

logc

9^ 11^^.

B< 90°,

c

B = 0.7897.

< a sin B. 84.54 < 134.16 X 0.7897.

&

no solution.

Given

find

4.

Given

= 91.06, b = 77.04, A = 51° 9^

find

B = 41° 13^

a

C= 6^^

a

B=

12°13^34'^

colog a

b

C=146°15'26^^

log 6

= 840, = 485, ^ = 21°31^ Here .'.

a^

b,

c

=

1272.15.

and log

B <.0.

sin

one solution, colog a log b

log sin log sin

B .-.

= 0.97308 = 8.54761 A = 0.06505 = 9.58574 - 10 = 0.38525.

= 7.07572 - 10 = 2.68574 A - 9.56440 B = 9.32586 = 12° 13^ 34^^ = 146° 15^ 26^^

.-.

log a

colog sin

C= A=

0.43560

=1.95933

log a log sin

colog sin

=

3.10454

=

1272.15.

2.92428

c

c

c

3.

a 6

Given

find

B = 57° 23^ 40^^ C= 2° 1^20^^

= 9.399, = 9.197,

^ = 120° 35^ colog a log h

log sin

log sin

B

c

=

0.38525.

= 9.02692 = 0.96365

9.99963

A = 0.10857 = 2.06753 = 116.82.

57° 23^ 40^^ 2°

Given

a = 55.55, 6 = 66.66, B = 77°

W

Here .•.

find

4.0''

b^ a,

;

A = 54° 3F 13^^, 7^^, (7 = 47° 44^ c = 50.481.

and log

sin

A < 0.

one solution.

= 1.74468 log sin B = 9.98999 = 8.17613-10 colog b log sin A = 9.91080 = 54° 31^ 13^^. A log a

10

A = 9.93495 B = 9.92552 =

C=

9.74466 5.

log

c

87° 37^ 54^^

= 116.82.

= 8.04067 - 10 = 1.88672 log sin A = 9.89143 log sin B = 9.81882 = 41° 13^ B = 87° 37^ 54^^

log c

log sin

(7

F20^^

.\G

=47°

44^

7''.

TRIGONOMETRY.

90

=

1.74468

C=

9.86925

log a log sin

= 1.70313 = 50.481.

log c c

a

=

Given a h

find

.5

Given 309, 6

=

360,

B=

find

6'^,

.•.

c

c^= 55.41.

=

log b log sin

colog a log sin

B .-.

C log a log sin

colog sin log

c

c

2.55630

A = 9.55904 = 7.51004 - 10 B = 9.62538 = 24° 57^ 54^^. = 133° 47^ 41^^. = 2.48996 C = 9.85843 A = 0.44096 = 2.78935 = 615.67.

Second Solution.

^/=

=

180°

-B

155° 2^ 6'\

C'=B-A = 3°

\

log a

43^ 29^^

= 2.48996 = 8.81267 A = 0.44096

log sin C^

colog sin

two

log c^

= 1.74359

c^

= 55.41.

44°

V

28^^

135° 58^ 32^^

e=

97°44^20^^

(7=

5° 47^ 16^^

=

13.954,

solutions.

3° 43^ 29'^

= 615.67.

38° 14:^12^^;

Here a
C=133°47MF^ C'=

=

9.787,

c^= 1.4203.

24°57^54^^ 2'

=

5^=

c

^ = 21°14'25^^

^^=155°

= 8.716,

^=

A = 0.08920

colog sin

6.

7.

colog

sin

5 < 0.

;

TEACHERS log sin

A=

log b

= 0.71684 = 9.35655 - 10 B = 10.00000 = 90°. = 32° 22' 43'^

colog a log sin

£ .-.

C log b log cos log c

9.

log a

9.92661

= 0.71684 ^ = 9.72877 = 0.44561 =2.791.

c

Given a

=

34,

6

=

22,

B = 30^ 20' A = 51° 18'

find

^/=

27",

128° 41' 33",

(7= 98° 21' 33", (7'= c

=

20° 58' 27", 43.098,

c'= 15.593.

Here

b <^a, but >»

a

sin

J5,

^ < 90°. .•.

two solutions log

=

a

log sin

colog b log sin

1.53148

B = 9.70332 = 8.65758 - 10 A = 9.89238 A = 51° 18' 27". A^=

128° 41' 33".

.-.

C=

98° 21° 33".

.-.

C'= 20° 58' 27".

log a

=1.53148

log sin

(7=9.99536

colog sin

A = 0.10762

log c c

= 1.63446 = 43.098.

EDITION".

and

91

TRIGONOMETEY.

92 log a

colog 6

log sin log sin

= 1.87506 = 8.53760 - 10 -8 = 9.44715 A = 9.85981 A = 46° 2V A5'\ A'=

133° 36^ 15^^

(7= 117° 20^ 39^^

C'= 30° log a

8^

=

9'^.

1.87506

colog sin

A = 0.14019

log sin

= 9.94854 = 1.96379

log

c

= sin A =

0.14019

(7''=

9.70075

log a

colog

log sin log c^

1.87506

TEACHERS EDITION. log (5

-

a)

colog (a

+

6)

10

= 0.13675 ^{A + tan UB-A) = 8.66129 i{B-A) = 2° 37^30^^.

log tan

log

= 0.73239 = 7.79215 -

log 6

B)

93

94 logc

TRIGONOMETRY.

TEACHERS EDITION. 8.

Given

95

96 Since e

TRIGONOMETRY.

TEACHERS EDITION. 16. In order to find the distance between two objects A and B separated by a swamp, a station C was chosen, and the distances CA = 3825

CB =

yards,

In triangle

3475.6 yards, together

b

^

.

+a=

49^

^ sin

34° 51^

sin 41° 49^'

_ 562 sin

7300.6 log 562

log sin 34° 51^

58° 44^ 30^^ colog sin 41° 49^ 4° 30^ 30^^

B= A=

log tan

log b

63° 15^

b

54° 14^

= 2.54332 = 6.13664-10

log(&-a) colog(6 + a)

^(5 + ^) =

In triangle

10.21680

(5 - ^) = 8.89676 H^ - ^) = 4° 30^ 30^^

a

^ sin 95°

C

9.94799

B

0.04916 3.57978

c

3800.

log 562

colog sin 43° 12^ log a

17.

and

Two

B

562 cos 5° 40^ sin 43° 12'

log cos 5° 40'

logc

inaccessible

objects

A

40^

sin 43° 12^'

_ log sin

= 2.74974 = 9.75696 = 0.17604 = 2.68274 = 481.65.

CBD

562

3.58263

colog sin

5V

B = 1S0°-{C+D) = 43° 12^.

log tan J

log 6

34°

sin 41° 49^

b-a = Sid A B+ A = 117° 29^ i{B + A)=

= 41° 562

to B.

b

ACD

A = 1S0°-{C+D)

with the angle ACB =^ 62° SV, were measured. Find the distance from

^

97

= 2.74974 = 9.99787 = 0.16460 = 2.91221 = 816.98.

are each viewed from two

In triangle ACB C and D 562 yards apart. The angle ACB is 62° 12^ BCD "*—^ x tan 41° 8^ ABB 60° 49^ and ADC tan }iA-B)= a+b stations

34°

5V

;

required the distance e

AB.

|

(A+B)

H^ + ^) = Hi80°-C) = 58° 54'. a- 6 = 816.98 -481.65 = 335.33. a + 6 = 816.98 +481.65 = 1298.63.

TRIGONOMETRY.

98

= b) = colog log tan i(^ + ^)= log

(a— {a +

b)

2.52547 6.88651

<

-10

10.21951

logtani(.4-5)= 9.63149

i(^-^)=

23° 10^26'^.

^ = 82° log a

4^26^A

2.91221

log sin

C

9.94674

colog sin

A

0.00418

logc

2.86313

c

729.68.

18.

Two

trains start at the

same

time from the same station, and move along straight tracks that form an angle of 30°, one train at the rate of 30 miles an hoar, the other at the rate of 40 miles an hour. How far apart are the trains at the end of half an hour ?

A i{A

teachers' edition. log a

99

TRIGONOMETRY.

100

= 8.16749-10

colog

s

colog

(s-b)

= = =

log (s- a) log (s-c)

9.52288

^=]36°23^50^^

- 10

^

1.23045

.-.

2 )20.60206-20

165° 45^.

(7=

14° 15^

78, 6

= 101, c = 29

.-.

2.

Given a

=

3.

10.30103

& c

63° 26^

Given a

6'\

;

78

colog

= 208 s = 104.

s-h= s — c= = - a) = log(s-5) = log \s-c) =

26.

5

145

s

= = = =

- 10

7.82974

8.43180-10 0.47712 2.03342

2)18.77208-20 75.

logtanJ^=

9.38604

= 13°40^16^^ A = 27° 20^ 32^^.

^J.

7.98297-10

(s

8.58503

- 10

0.47712 colog

1.87506

9.46009

= =

log

- 5) = {s-c) =

log

tan|5=

colog

J^ = 16° A = 32°

s

log(s-a)

2)18.92018-20

= colog (s 5) = log(s-a) = log (s - c) =

111

=

3.

s

s

= 145, c = 40;

=

(s- a) log(s-5) log {s-c)

colog

colog

5

a

colog

colog

logtanJ^=

25^ 16^^

c= 40 2 s = 296 s = 148. s — a= 37. s - 5 = 3. = s-c 108.

= 101 = _29

— a=

= 111,

126° 52^ 12^^

2s

s

34^ 44^^.

find the angles.

find the angles.

a=

5 = 168° C= 11°

1.68124

5= J ^ = B= A^- B =

log tan 1

+

(s

7.82974-10 1.56820 9.52288

- 10

2.03342

5^27^^ 2 )20.95424-20

10^ 54^^

^B=

7.98297-10 9.52288

10.47712 71° 33^ 54^^.

^ = 143° 7M8^^. 5 + ^ = 170° 28^ 20^^. C= 9° 3F 40^^.

- 10

1.41497 1.87506

.-.

2 )20.79588-20

logtan

1^ = 10.39794

^B=

68° 11^ 55^^

4.

Given a

= 21,

find the angles.

6

= 26,

c

=

31

;

TEACHERS EDITIOX

= 21 6=26 c = 31 2s = 78 s = 39. s-a=18. s-6 = 13. a

s-c= colog

s

colog (s-a) log

(s-h)

log

(s

- c)

= = = =

.-.

colog log

{s-a)=

(s - 6) = log {s-c) =

colog

8.40894-10 8.74473

- 10

1.11394 0.90309

9.58535

6^ 13^^

1.25527 8.88606

-

10

0.90309

2 )19.45836-20

logtaiiJ^= 9.72668

B = 56° ^ + ^ = 98° .-.

.-.

5.

Given a

C=

= 19,

a= &= c

5

12M9^^

= 34,

19

34

= _49

2s=102 s= 51. s-a'= 32.

s-h= 8-C=

6^ 36^^

81° 47^ 11^^

find the angles.

17. 2.

colog

(s-a)

-

log

(s

log

(s-c)

5)

M

= 8.40894-10

s

s

= = = =

logtanJ^=

8.

A = 42°

colog

8.29243

8.49485

- 10 - 10

1.23045 0.30103

2)18.31876-20

2)19.17070-20

logtani^=

101

49

=

9.15938 8° 12^ 48^^.

TRIGONOMETRY.

102

= 8.12494-10

cologs

log(s-a)=

1.50515

- 6) =

8.60206

{s-c)=

1.25527

2)

19.48742

logtanJ^=

9.74371

colog log

(s

8.

Given a =73,

- 10 -

(7= 75° 10^ 41^^

Given a

=

31, 5

= 58,

c

=

79

find the angles.

a=

37

6=

58

colog

s

{s-a) log(s-&) log (s-c)

colog

= = = =

50. 29. 8.

8.06048 8.30103

- 10 - 10

1.46240 0.90309

2 )18.72700-20

logtan^^=

9.36350

J^ = 13°0M4^^. A = 26° 0^ 29^^. =

8.06048

log(s-a)=

1.69897

colog

s

colog

(s

log

(s

- 6) = - c) =

8.53760

-

10

- 10

0.90309

2)19.20014-20

logtanJ5=

^B= .-.

;

colog

log

= 174 s= 87.

s-b= s-e=

82

41.

— c=

32.

s

(s-a) log(s-6)

2s

— a=

73

&=

colog

c=_79

s

a=

s-b= s

7.

9.60007

21°42M0^^

B = 43° C= 110°

= 82,

c

= 91;

c= 91 2s = 246 s = 123. — = 50. a s

20

J5 = 28°59^52^^ B = 57° 59^ 44^^. .-.

6

find the angles.

25^ 20^^.

34^ 11^/.

(s - c)

= = = =

7.91009

8.30103 1.61278

1.50515

- 10 - 10

TEACHERS EDITION. cologs

colog(s-a) log(s-6) log (s-c)

= 8.16481-10 = 8.26819-10 = 1.11344 = 0.17846 2)17.72490-20

log tan J

A

8.86245

A = 8°

20^

= 8.16481-10 log(s-a) = 1.73181 colog -b) = 8.88656 - 10 cologs

(.s

log (s-c)

-

0.17846

2)18.96164-20

logtaiiJ5= 9.48082

^B=

16° 50^

B=

33° 40^

.-.(7=138°.

10.

Given a=y/5,b = V6,

c

= V7]

find the angles.

=V5 = 2.2361 6 =V6 = 2.4495 c=V7 = 2.6458 a

2s =7.3314 s

= 3.6657.

s-a = 1.4296. 8-6 = 1.2162. s-c = 1.0199. = = log (s-c) = colog s colog (s-a) = log (s-b)

0.08500 0.00856 9.43585 9.84478

- 10 - 10

2 )19.37419-20

logtanJ^=

9.68709

|^ = 25°56^36^^ A = 51° 53^ 12^^

colog

(s -

103

104

TRIGONOMETRY. s = — a= s - 6 = s — c =

colog

5.

colog {s-c) log

(s

- 6)

log

(s

-

5. 1.

= = = =

s

a)

- 10

8.95861

0.00000 0.69897 0.69897

^C= 56° C= 112° an

- 20

6'\

53^

isosceles triangle,

= 33° = 6,

Given a

&

C)

33^ 27^^.

=

6,

c

=

6

;

find the angles.

The

triangle

equilateral

is

and

also equiangular.

A = B=C=^of 180° = 60°.

.-.

14.

Given a

= 6,

6

= 5,

c

sides

a and

= 12

;

find the angles.

The sum is less .•.

the triangle

15.

two

of the

than the side

Given

VS — 1

;

a

is

=

impossible.

h

=V6,

find the angles.

6

a=2 = V6 = 2.4495

c= VS- 1 = 0.732 2 6 = 5.1815 5 = 2.5908. s-a = 0.5908. s- 6 = 0.1413.

s-c=

b

c.

2,

log tan ^ J.

=

iA=

26^ 33^^.

^ = ^=1(180°-

13.

= 9.38869-10

1.8588.

s

c

9.61725

logtan|5 = 10.23855 logtan^(7= 9.11946

log tan^ (7= 10.17828

is

logr

colog

2 ) 20.35655

Since this

log r2

= 9.77144-10 = 9.15014-10 = 0.26923 = 9.58656 - 10 = 18.77737 - 20

log(s-a) log(5-&) log {s-c)

ll.

s

=

22° 30^

TEACHEES EDITION.

hA =

105

TEIGONOMETRY.

106 have but one value

;

II. the side opposite

may have two

not known, and ues

;

while in Case the angle is

therefore the angle also

val-

may

have two values. 20, If the sides of a triangle are 3,

4,

and

6,

find the sine of the

largest angle.

= h= c =

_6

=

13

a

2s 5

3

4

= 6.5.

107

TEACHERS EDITION.

Exercise XVII. 1.

Given a

= 4474.5,

b

=

C= 116° 30' 20^' find the F= Ja&sin C.

= 3.65075 = 3.33536 = 9.69897 -

log a log b

colog 2 log sin

log

C =

9.95177

=

6.63685

F

F 2.

Given

A = 66°

10

=4333600. b

4' 19^'

= ;

21.66,

c

=

36.94,

find the area.

F=^bcsmA. log 6

2164.5,

area.

;

Page

69.

TRIGONOMETRY.

108

s=

637.

— a= s-b= s-c=

432.

s

192.

= 2.80414

log

s

log

{s-a) = 1.11394

log Is-b) log {s-c)

2 log i^ log

F 7.

13.

F

= 2.63548 = 2.28330 = 8.83686 = 4.41843.

= 26208.

Given h = 149,

^ = 70° 42^ 30^^

TEACHEES EDITION. log

109

TRIGONOMETRY.

110

a Obtain a formula for the area

13.

of an isosceles trapezoid in terms of

the two parallel sides and an acute angle.

AB = a.

Let

F=^{a + h)

c.

- = tan A P c

.-.

=p

tan A.

F= l{a^h)x^{a—h) tan A = \{a?- ¥) tan A.

14.

Two sides and

included angle

and and included

of a triangle are 2416, 1712,

30°

;

and two

sides

angle of another triangle are 1948, and 150°; find the sum of

2848,

their areas.

Let a

=

2416, c

= 1712, B =

F= h ac sin B. log a

=3.38310

30°.

;

Ill

TEACHERS EDITION.

Exercise XVIII. 1. From a ship sailing down the English Channel the Eddy stone was observed to bear N. 33° 45^ W.

and

after

the

ship

miles S. 67° 30^ 15^ E.

Find

its

had

sailed

18

bore N. 11° distance from each

W.

it

position of the ship.

a

= 18

miles.

ACE^ DCB=

33° 45^

ABF=

11° 15^

67° 30°.

ACB = 1S0°~{ACE + DCB) = 78° 45^ CBD = 90° -DCB = 22° 30^ ABC= 90° - {CBD + ABF) = 56° 15^ .^^C=45°. 6_sin_S a sin J.

c

_ sin C sin

A

Page log a

70.

TRIGONOMETRY.

112 S'A

sin

ASS'

TEACHERS EDITION.

colog sin

By

1.00000

log a

A

Table VI.

0.30103

logc

1.30103

c

20.

113

:.

B = Z. area O = 28.274. 301036

BOQ-

X360°

1296000 75259

In a

with the radius 3 find the area of the part comprised 6.

between

circle

parallel

lengths are 4 and

chords 5.

(Two

whose

area sector

BOC 75259

solu-

324000

tions.)

log 75259 log 28.274

colog 324000

log area

Area sector

F=Vs{s-

log(s-6) cologs(s-a)

= = =

0.30103

0.30103

9.30103-10

2 )19.90309-20

logtanJ-BOC= 9.95155-10

J50C= 41° BOQ= 83°

48^ 38^^ 37^ 16^^

X

28.274.

= 4.87656 = 1.45139 = 4.48945 - 10 = 0.81740

50C= 6.5675.

In triangle

log (s-c)

X360^

324000

BOO

TRIGONOMETRY.

114 log

{s-d)

log

(s

colog

=0.39794

- a)

= 0.39794 = 9.56067 - 10

s{s-o)

40^391^

DOA

1296000 sector

DOA =

2)0.35655

logtanJDOJ.

= 0.17828

^DOA= 56° DOA = 112°

26^35.5^^

F= log log log

Area

sector

= 0.94772 = 8.8658.

DxA = 4.72.

Area segment

\^s{s-o){s-a){s-d). s{s-o)

=

- d) (s - a)

= 0.39794 = 0.39794

(s

0.43933

2)1.23521

= 0.61761 = 4.1458.

\ogF

F

A

and B, two inaccessible obsame horizontal plane, are observed from a balloon at C and from a point D directly under the balloon, and in the same horizontal plane with A and B. If CD = 2000 yards, Z ^ CD = 10° 15^ 10^^ 7.

Area segment

DACB

= areaO-[%C+i)a;^] = 21.4587. Area segment DAC^B^ = DxA - B'xC^

= 2.6247.

AD = 361,76.

jects in the

Z BCD =

6° 7^ 20''^

34^ 50^^ find

Z ADB = 49°

AB.

AD = DCxt&nACD, logtanAOD =9,25739 log

X 28.274.

=5.60894 =1.45139 log 28.274 colog 1296000 = 3.88739-10

53^ IV^,

DOA

360°.

log 406391

log area

In triangle

406391

1296000

X

DO

log^D

=

3.30103

2.55842

DB = DC xts^n BCD.

TEACHEES EDITION.

U^ + ^)

=

65° 12^ 35^^.

115

.

SPHEEICAL TEIGOIsrOMETET. Page

Exercise XIX. 1.

70°,

104.

The angles of a triangle are! 4. Prove and 100°; find the sides' three right

80°,

of the polar triangle.

Given to find

If angles A, B,

Q

respectively,

are right angles, the side b the meas-

c^.

= 110°. 180°- 80° = 100°.

a^=180°6/=

have

angles, the sides of the

triangle are quadrants.

A = 70°, B = 80°, C= 100°;

a\ y,

that, if a triangle

c the measure of and a the measure of angle

ure of angle B,

70°

angle

C,

:

A, are each

c/=i80°-100°=

80°. .•.

sides

= 90° of

;

ABC

triangle

are

quadrants. 2. 90°,

The sides of a triangle are 40°, and 125° find the angles of ;

the polar triangle.

Given a

= 40°, b = B\ C

90°, c

=

125° ;

required A^,

^/=180°- 40° = ^/=180°- 90°=

140°.

side.

90°.

- 125° =

(7= 180°

5. Prove that, if a triangle have two right angles, the sides opposite these angles are quadrants, and the third angle is measured by the number of degrees in the opposite

In spherical triangle

55°.

B = C=

let

3.

Prove

that

the

quadrantal triangle

is

polar of a a right

tri-

Let the triangle

ABC be

a quad-

rantal triangle.

Then Let

A^B^C

But .-.

triangle

angle.

= 90°.

a right

BC.

B + b^= 180°, .-.

;

c^= 90°.

90°. is

of degrees in

b'= 90° C-fc^= 180°,

= 180°. 5= 90°.

h

A'B^C

AC and AB A is measured

ABC.

Now

be the polar triangle.

^^=

angle.

Let A^B^C^ be the polar triangle of

I

B'^

.'.

We are to prove quadrants, also that by the number

angle.

rt.

ABC

.•.

tri-

and

A^B^C^ is 5^=90°, (7=90°.

triangle

But

B^+

b

=

180°.

isosceles,

TRIGONOMETRY.

118

h=

90°.

C'+ c = c=

180°,

.-.

.-.

5

.*.

Now

and

90°.

are quadrants.

ABCi?, bi-rectangular.

.'.

A

.'.

J. is

is

the pole of side BC.

measured by

side

BC.

How can the sides

6.

cal

c

triangle

length,

when

of a spheribe found in units of

the

radius of the sphere

By

length is

of

the

known.

using the formula 2 irB

=

C.

For instance, if the sides of a triangle were 40°, 90°, 125°, the sides in terms of R would be

;

TEACHERS EDITION. than 90°, their cosines have opposite and their product will be

C=c= 90°.

Also

signs,

cos

negative. If cos c

then

=

a negative

c is greater

B = cos 6. B = h.

quantity,

than 90°.

a

(iv.) If

Prove, by aid of Formula

[40],

.-.

C= 90°.

.-.

[40],

A = cos a X sin B. sin B is positive. B < 180°. Hence sign of cos A is same as cos

and both

sign of cos a,

Deduce from [37]-[42] the

4.

tan^ ^ 6

From

must be

either greater or less than 90°

;

that

= tan ^{c — a) tan ^{0 + a).

[37],

cos 6

page

74,

= cos c

1

1

sec

1

1

-I

a

= 90°

= 90°. = cos a X

cos

.'.

Hence a (ii.)

;

(iv.) if

.

and 6-90°?

If c

(i.)

= 90°

cos h.

= 0. = 90°.

= 90°. = X sin B. cos ^ = 0. A = 90°. cos -B = COS 6 X 1 = cos 6. B=h. If 6 = 90°, B = 90° and A = a.

If

.

^^„ cos

a

cos J.

COS c

— cos c

c os

+

cos a

+

page

47,

cos 6 [18],

a

cos c

— cos 6 = tan^ ^ 6.

+ cos 6 And if in [23] and [22], page 48, we write a and c in place of A and 1

B and

divide [23] by [22],

cos a — cos cos a

+

we

get

c

cos c

= — tan ^{a e) tan i{a — c) = tan J (c + a) tan J (c — a). -j-

.'.

tan^ J 6

= tan ^ (c + a) tan f (c — a). 5.

= 90° and a = 90°. cos A = COS a sin B. A = a = 90°.

+

a

— cos 6 _

.-.

If c

= cos

1

1

.-.

(iii.)

7>

1

But by

a or cos 6 or 6

+

a

cos a

;

and a

;

J.

What inferences may be drawn

respecting the values of the other parts (i.) if c = 90° (ii.) if a = 90°

= 90°

a

„^o — cos = cos a — cos c

COS

:

we have

whence

alike in kind.

(iii.) if c

for-

mula

.-.

3.

= 90°.

= X 0. c = 90°.

always alike in kind.

is,

6

cos c

a right spherical triangle each leg and the opposite angle are that in

Formula

= 90°,

A = 90°, B = 90°.

Then 2.

119

Deduce from [37]-[42] the for-

mula tan2 (45°

=

-^A) tan J

(c



a) cot J (c

+

a).

TRIGONOMETRY.

120

From

[38],

sin

= sm a sm c

A

— sin A _

1

+

sin

A

sin c

— sin

sin c

+

sin

c

— tan a _ sin

(c

— a)

c

+

(c

+

tan a

sin

a)

— g) 1 p _ sin (c t&n^B

when, operating as in Example we have 1

tan tan

4,

sin (c

+

sin (c

— a) esc (c + a).

a a

a)

7. Deduce from [37]-[42] the forpage 47, we substitute mula 90° -r A for z, and remember that tan^ J c = — cos {A+B) sec {A—B). cos (90° + A) = — sm A, [19] reduces By [42], cos c = cot ^ cot B to the form

If in [19],

_ cot

= cot2(45°+J^) ^^^^ + sm ^

tan

1

= tan2(45°-J^), (since 45°

+

and 45°

J J.

— ^A

sin

sin c

+

are

By

Deduce from [37]-[42] the

'

By

B = sin (c — a) esc (c by operating

+

for-

a).

as be-

1

— cos B _ tan c — tan a

1

+

[18],

cos

B

page

tan

c

+

+

And we sin G

— cos c

1

+

m place oic tan

place of tan

i.

B + cot A

47,

tan^ I

c,

~ cos{A-B) tan^ J c = - cos {A+B) sec {A—B). Deduce from [37]-[42] the

8.

c,

A and

for-

mula

sin

a

m

tan2 J J.

= tan [J ( J. + ^) - 45°] tan [J (^-5) + 45°].



cos a a,

cos c

tan

47,

write on the second side

-,

page

1

cos i?

cos c

obtain

[18],

c

'

.-.

tan a

l^^^^ = tanH5. 1

+ cos

B — cot A B + cot A sin ^ cos A sin J. cos ^ sm B cos ^ sin J. cos B _ sin Asm B — cos J. cos ^ sin Asm B + cos J. cos B _ — cos (^ + B)

mula

[39],

1

tan

= tan }{c — a) cot J (c + a).

From

— cos c _ tan B — cot A

tan

and

.•.tan2(45°-J.4)

tan^ ^

1

^4

sin J.

= tan ^{c — a) cot J (c + a).

6.

.

B'

whence, as before,

complementary angles). And by dividmg [21] by [20], page 48, and writing c for A and a for B, we have c — sin

J.

and reducing, we

From cos

[40]

a

= cos A CSC 5 = cos A sin

B

TEACHERS EDITION. whence, by proceeding as before,

By

1

— cos a _ sin B — cos A

1

+

cos

a

sin

.-.

tan (a;-45°) tan (45°

B + cos A

(sin

cos

1

+

If in

cos

a a

tan^ h a.

[6], p. 44,

we make x =

45°,

And,

=

in

like

tan (x -45°)

= \{A^-Bl

x-y = B, tan [^(^

+

tan2 ^ a

a;

Exercise XXI. 1.

Show

that Napier's Rules lead

sin

a

[38], [39], [40],

and

[41].

sin b sin

a

sin h

= cos co. c cos co. A = sin c sin A. = cos co. c cos co. B = sin c sin B.

2.

come, sin CO.

5

B = tan a

tan co.

c.

cos J.

= tan a cot A = tan 6 tan co. c. = tan b cot

sin CO.

A = cos a cos co.

cos

sin CO.

cos

A

sin CO.

cos

B

c.

the

cos

- 5) +

45°]

A

cos -4

= tan [} {A + B) - 45°] tan [i {A-B) + 45°].

Page

to the equations contained in For-

mulas

+

sin J? .-.

A,'

+ ^)- 45°]

_ sin B —

making

we have

cos

we

+y=

tan [^ (^

= sm X — cos X

which x

values,

x

the equation becomes

sin X

+ y) + y)

= l{A-B\

cosy

manner,

— sin y)

y

whence

45° in [10], page 46,

(a^

(cc

may have any

^^

_ cos y + sin y cos y — sin y y

— y) — cos — y) + cos

(a?

y

make x

=

cos x) (cos

If in this equation, in

and y

we have tan (45°+ 2/)

+

a;

sin {x

sin

1

+ y)

(sin X — cos x) (sin y + cos y)

page 47,

[18],

121

109.

= tan co. B tan 5 = cot B tan 6. = tan a tan co. A = tan a cot -4,

What if we

will Napier's Rules be-

take as the five parts of

triangle,

the hypotenuse,

the

two oblique angles, and the complements of the two legs.

c.

= cos

a

5 = cos b =

^.

sin B.

cos co. J.,

cos 6 sin A.

(i.) Cosine of middle part equals product of cotangents of adjacent

parts.

(ii.) Cosine of middle part equals product of sines of opposite parts.

TRIGONOMETRY.

122

Exercise XXII. 1.

Solve the right triangle, given 5 = 43° 32^ ?>V\

a =36° 27^

Taking a

as the

have, hy Eule sin

whence 3

and

a

tan h ^

middle part,

I.,

-r,

= tan h cot B, — sin a tan B, tan h

we

Page

114.

123

TEACHEES EDITION. Solve the right triangle, given 10^ b = 150° 59^ U^\

4.

a

= 120°

6.

c

Solve the right triangle, given 49' 51", a = 14° 16' 35".

= 23°

= COS a cos h. t&nA = tana esc b. tan B = tan b esc a. cos c

log cos a log cos & log cos c c

log tan a log esc 6

log tan

cos b

=9.70115

= =

log cose

=9.96130

log sec a

= 0.01362

log cos &

=9.97492

b

= 9.91180 = 9.64295 = 63° 55' 43.3'^

sin

log sin

0.31437

A = 10.55002 cos

cot

log

Solve the right triangle, given 55° 9' 32'^ a = 22° 15' 7''.

7.

5.

c.

c

Solve the right triangle, given 33' 17", a = 32° 9' 17".

= 44°

cos b

= cos c

sec a.

tana =9.61188

log cose

=9.85283

log cote log

= 9.84266 cos B = 9.45454 B = 73° 27' 11.16".

log sec a log cos b

= 0.07231 = 9.92514

= sin a tan B. sin a = 9.57828 tan B = 10.52709

tan h log

log

log tan 6 =10.10537 b

cos

=51°

A =

sin

c.

= 10.10537 log cote = 9.84266 log cos A = 9.94803 28' 25.71".

=32°

41'.

A = sin a esc

log sin a

c.

=9.72608

= 0.15391 A = 9.87999 A = 49° 20'

log CSC e log sin

log tan b

A - 27°

b

53'.

tan b cot

c.

= 9.40562 = 10.33488 cos B = 9.76050 B = 54° 49' 23.3".

log tan

log

«

log tan a

= 0.06320 B = 9.80703 5 = 147°19'47.14'^

cot

= 0.39358 — —

B = tan a

log esc a

B = tan a

c.

A =9.78557 A = 37° 36' 49.4'^

log cote

cos

19° 17'.

A = sin a esc

log ^ CSC e

10.23565

log tan 5 =9.74383

=

=

log sin a =9.39199

J..= 105°44'21.25''.

c

= cos c sec a.

COS

B = tan a cot c. =

9.79840

= B = B=

10.00675

log tan a log cot c

log cos

16.3".

9.80515 50° 19' 16'^

TRIGONOMETEY.

124 .

c

8.

Solve the riglit triangle, given 13^ 4^^ a = 132° 1¥ 12'\

b

= 97°

cos b

= cos

c

or

sin

=9.09914

log sec a

= 0.17250

log sec

=9.27164

log cos

=

h

esc

c.

= 9.86945 = 0.00345 c A = 9.87290 A = 48° 16^ 10^^

B = sec a cos A. a =0.66004

A = 9.02323 log sin B = 9.68327 B = 28° 49^

79° 13^ 38.18^^

A = sin a

sin

28° 14^ 31.3^^.

151° 45^ 28.7^^

sec a.

log cose

log cos 6

= =

=

or

151° 10^

57.4^^,

2.6^^

log sin a log esc

log sin

But

A

10. Solve the right triangle, given

a

=

77°

and a must be of the same

A = 131°

50^^ sin c

log sin a

kind, .-.

2V

log CSC J.

43^ 50^^

log sin c

B = tan a cot

cos

log tan a

=

a

=

9.10259

log cot

c

log cos

B =

9.14455

sin c

=

sin

a

esc

log sin a

= 9.98935

^

=0.00243

= =

log sin c c

sin c

>

1,

= 92°

Since

c

A.

tan

log tan a log log

tan b log sin a

78° 53^ 20^^.

log tan b b

=

101° 6^ 40^^

sin h

=

tan a cot A.

cos

log

tana =10.64939

log cot

A =

9.02565

=

9.67504

log sin b

impossible.

B = 50° V V\ =

tan a sec B.

=11.31183

=

tan B.

9.99948

= 10.07619 =50°.

A = cos a sin B.

log cos a log sin

= sin a

B = 10.07671

its sine, it

values which are

c

also

is

sec B = 0.19223 tan c = 11.50406 c =91°47M0^^

supplements of each other.

Hence

e

9.99178

found from

is

which

47^ 32^^

log tan

may have two

= sin a esc A. = 9.98935 = 0.18588 = 10.17523

11. Solve the right triangle, given

a

58^ 53.3^^.

Solve the right triangle, given 77° 21^ 50^^ A = 83° 56^ 40^^

log CSC

.".

40^ 40^^

10.04196

B = 81° 9.

c.

A = 40°

= 8.68765

B = 9.88447

log cos .4

=8.57212

A = 92°

8^ 23^^.

TEACHERS EDITION. 12. Solve the right triangle, given

B = 12°

o = 2° 0^ 55^^

tan h

a tan B.

=8.54612 -9.35170

log sin a log tan

= sin

40\

5

log tan &

= 7.89782

h

=0° tan

log tan a

log sec

^

log tan

c

c

cos

c

27^ 10.2^^

= tan a sec B. = 8.54639 -0.01070

= 8.55709 = 2° 3' 55.7^^

A = cos a sin ^.

log cos a

= 9.99973

B = 9.34100 cos ^ =9.34073

log sin

log

A

=

77° 20^ 28.4^^

13, Solve the right triangle, given

a

=

20° 20^ 20^^

tan b log sin a

B = 38° = sin

10^ 10^^

a tan B.

125

TRIGONOMETRY.

126

16. Solve the right triangle, given c

= 112°

48^

A = 56° V 56^^ B = cos c tan A. 1

cot

= 9.58829 tan J. = 10.17427

log cose log

log cot

^=

9.76256

£ = 120°

= sin c sin A. sin c = 9.96467 sin ^ = 9.91958 sin

log

log

3^ 50^^

a

log sin a

a

=9.88425

= 50°.

log cos

= cos A tan c. A = 9.74532

log tan

c

tan b

=10.37638

log tan 5 =10.12170 b

17. Solve the

ri^

=

127°

4^ 30^^

TEACHERS EDITION. 20. Solve the right triangle, given

127

22. Solve the right triangle, given

A = 116° 43^ 12^^ B = 116° 3V 25'\ A = 90°, B = 88° 24^ 35^^. cos c = cot A cot B. cos a = cos A CSC £. But cot J. = 0. log cos A = 9.65286 log CSC B = 0.04830 cos c = 0. .•.

log cos a

= 9.70116

a =120° 10^ 3^^

= cos J. .A = 0. a = 0. a

cos

= cos -B CSC A. cos 5 = 9.64988 CSC J. = 0.04904 cos h = 9.69892

cos b

log log log

b

But

COS .•.

cos

= cos B CSC J.. A = l. b =B. b = 88° 24^ 35^^.

cos b

=119°59M6^^.

log cot log cot

log cos

= cot A cot B. ^ = 9.70190 5 = 9.69818 c = 9.40008 c = 75° 26^ 58^^

c

21. Solve the right triangle, given

A=

CSC B.

a =90°.

CSC

log cos

=90°.

c

Define a quadrantal triangle,

23.

its solution may be reduced to that of the right triangle.

and show how

A

quadrantal triangle

is

a

tri-

46° 59^ 42^^, B = 57° 59^ 17^^. angle having one or more of its sides equal to a quadrant. cos a = COS CSC B. Let A^B'Q^ be a quadrantal tri-

A

log cos

log esc

A = 9.83382 B = 0.07164

log cos a

a

= 9.90546 = 36° 27^

= cos B CSC A. B = 9.72435 A = 0.13591 b = 9.86026 b = 43° 32^ 37^^

cos b

log cos

log CSC log cos

cos c

= cot A

^ = 9.96973 cot B = 9.79599

log cos

c

c

A'B'=

90°, or

a

quadrant.

Let ABQ\)^

Then

its

polar triangle.

since

.-.

A'B'^ (7=180°, C=90°. ABQ\% a right triangle.

.•.

all parts of

may

the polar triangle

be found by formulas for right

The parts

triangle.

of

A^B^C^ may

then be found by subtracting proper parts of

A^Cfrom

180°.

cot B.

log cot log

angle with side

= 9.76572 = 54° 20^

24. Solve the quadrantal triangle

whose

sides are

a

=

b= c

=

:

174° 12^ 49.1^^ 94° 90°.

8^20'^,

TRIGONOMETRY.

128

Let A^, B^, C, a\ ¥, c' repre- log tan 0° 49^ 25.5^^= 8.15770 sent the corresponding angles and log tan 4° 57^ 45.4^/= 8.93867 sides of the polar triangle. 2 ) 7.0963 7

Then A'^

5=>

B'=

85°

C^=

90°.

tan^

47^ 10.9^^,

bV

log tan

W\

^a^= 8.54819 ia^= 2° 1^25^''. 4°

a^=

2^50^^.

^ = 175°57^10^^

\ c'

= - cos {B'+A') sec {B^-A'). B'+ A^=

91° 38^ 50.9^^

B^- A^=

80°

25. Solve the quadrantal triangle

4^ 29. F^.

in

which

= 90°, A = 110° c

log cos log sec

(5^+ J-O =8.45863 (^^- .40 = 0.76356

47^ 50^^

5=135°35^34.5^^

2 )9.22219 log tan Jc^

A\ B\

(7,

a',

¥,

c^ repre-

sent the corresponding angles and

Jc^= c^ =

22° 12^561^^.

sides of the polar triangle.

44° 25^ 53^^.

Then

C==135°34^ tan2 J b'= tan [J

Let

= 9.61110

{B'+

7^^

A^ - 45°]

a'= 69° 12^

10^^.

&/= 44° 24^ 25.5^^

(7=

90°.

tan[45°+H^^-^0]-

- 45° = 49^ 45° + i {B'- A^) = 85°

J (^^+ .SO

log tan

0° 49^ 25.5^^=

log tan 85°

tan

25.5^^ 2^ 14.6^^

A^=

log CSC

= 10.42043 = y 0.15505

log tan

A^=

8.15770

A^= log tan 1 6^=

a

9.60952

6^= 44° 17^

5 =135° (^^+

45°

6^58^^

75°

42^ 50^^

^0 - 45°]

= 104°

53^

tan

B^=

tan h^ csc

log tan

5^=

9.99101

=

0.02926

10^^.

tan[45°-H^'-^0]-

H-S^+^0 - 45° = 0°

10.57548

9.21903

J&^= 22° 8^35^^

tan2 J a'= tan [J

h^.

log tan a'

2^4.6^^= 11.06133 2)

tan a^ esc

log CSC a^ log tan

2^^.

a^.

B^= 10.02027 B^= 46°20M2^^ b

= 133°

39^ 48^^

49^ 25.5^^.

- J {B'-A') = 4° 57^

45.4^^

cos c'

= cot J.''

cot B^.

TEACHERS EDITION.

Given in a right spherical A = 42° 24^ 9^^ ^ = 9° 4^

log cot A'=^ 9.42452

28.

B^=

triangle,

log cot

log cos c^

9.97973

W^

= 9.40425

129

solve the triangle.

;

= cot J. cot B. tI = 10.03943 B = 10.79688 c = 10.83631

cos c c/

=

75° 18^ 2V^. log cot

(7=104°4F39^^

log cot log cos

26.

A,

Q

Given in a spherical triangle which and c = 90° solve the tri-

is

impossible.

;

.".

angle.

a

sin

.'.

= sin c

sin

= tan

impossible.

is

A.

= 1x1. a = 90°.

tan b

triangle

c cos

a

29. In a right triangle, given 119° IF, = 126°54^ solve

=

^

the triangle. tan c

A

log tan a

= cox0.

log cos .-.

cot

.-.

b

= 45°.

27.

=

90°

Given ;

= 0xco. B = 45°,

^ = 60°, C= 90°,

tan cot

= =

10.47452 71° 27^ 43^^

= sin a tan 5. sin a = 9.94105 tan B = 10.12446 tan b = 10.06551

tan b log

and

log

solve the triangle. sin

0.22154

c

log

c

B=

log tan c

5 = cos c tan A.

= tan a sec B. = 10.25298

6

= sin c sin A. b = tan c cos yl. 5 = cos c tan J.. a

cos .A ,

log cos a

=130°4F42^^

= cos a sin 5. =9.68807

B = 9.90292 log cos A = 9.59099 ^ = 112° 57^ log sin

sin .•.

sin

= 1. a = sin A. a = A = 60°. c

30.

= 00. tan 5 = 00. 6 = 90°. cos e = 0. .'•.cot^ = 0. tan

c

.".

B = 90°.

c

2^\

In a right triangle, given

= 50°,

b

= 44°

18^ 39^^

;

solve the

triangle.

cos a

log cos e colog cos b

log cos a

a

= cos c sec b. = 9.80807 = 0.14535 = 9.95342 = 26° 3^ 51^^.

TRIGONOMETRY.

130 sin

A=

TEACHERS EDITION.

131

sinM— cos'^B :



tan^a

sin^a

sin^a

cos^c

sin^c

cos^a

sin^c

sin% cos^a

cot^'c

— sin^a

cos^c

sm^c

cos'^a

_ sin% (cos^a — cos^c) (1) cos^'a sm'^c

Now cos c

= cos a

cos^a

= cos^c

cos

6.

But

cos^c

cos^S cos^c

= cos^a

sm

= sin

c

— cos% cos*6

cos^c sin^5

-Q^2

cos^5.

0~D'

b

0E\ DE'

sin^

= s in^Z)

sm^c

0E\ OD^ - OE^ 0E\ ED''

Substitute these values in sin^a

on^~OE^

(1),

ED"

— co&'^B

=

1.

'cos-'c

cos^a cos^S cot^^c

_ '"

cos'-^i

cos^c

X

sin-6

sin^^

.•.

sinM = cos^^ +

sin (6

+

c)

sin (b

+

g)

cos^6

=

2 cos^ J a cos 6 sin

—sm— +

sin & cos c ;

cos'^c— cos^acos*&

cos

sin^i?

cos^c sin^6

2



9

D

sin^a sm^ij

/cos^c f

c.

= sin 5 cos c + cos h sin c

cos^6 sin^5



sin^a sin^^.

36. In a right triangle prove that cos^5

cos^c sin^6

= sin^a

sin^^.

sin^^

— cos^g

= sin^a

— cos^^ = sin^a

.•.

cos^6

= sin'^a

_ ODx OE^

— cos'^acos^SX :

)

cos^c sin^6

J

:

c

,

T

1

\

7

cos

J

= (tan b cot c+1) cos b sin But tan b cot c = cos A, tanJ cote +1 ^ cos J. + 1. .•.



sm c c.

(1)

(2)

:

TRIGONOMETRY.

132 cos

4

^+

1

COS

Substitute in

(2),

(tan bc^e + 1) =

Substitute in sin (6

+

hA.

2 cos^ J A.

(1),

= 2 cos^ ^A cos h sin

c)

c.

37. In a right triangle prove that

— b) = 2 sin^ ^a cos 6 sin sin (c — b) = sin c cos b — cos c sin b sin {c

= sm c cos

7

A-,

1



cosf sin b\

5

^^s

(1)

=

cos

=

2

,

6).

(2)

In triangle

A. 1

— cos A

tan

CBD

5(7= tan 5Z)

sinM = '\~

= tan ni sec B

cos

A

_

tan cos

1

(3),

— cot c tan 5 = 2 sin^ | A.

,

sin (c

o

— 5) = 2 sin^ J a sin e cos b.

w

hypotenuse, and n the segments of the hypotenuse made by this arc adjacent to the legs a and b respectively,

prove that (i.)

tan^a

(ii.)

sin^p

= tan c tan m, = tan m tan n.

= tan m ^, X

B = tan m

In triangle

2d.

sinp

and

=

5

cos

cot c

cos

(2),

38. If, in a right triangle, p denote the arc of the great circle passing through the vertex of the right angle and perpendicular to the

m 5

Multiplying the two equations, tan''a

Substitute in

sec 5.

(3)

tan a

Substitute in

c.

cot c

= sin c cos 6(1— cote tan

1— cote tan

BCA cos B = tan a cot cos B :. tan a =

In triangle

sin c cos oy

\

cot c tan b

c.

tan c.

CBD tan

m

cot

ili";

CAD sinp = tan n

cot iV!

Mx cot i\^=

1.

in triangle

But

cot

.-.

if+iV"=90°. sin^p

=

tan

m

tan w.

TEACHERS EDITION.

Exercise XXIII. 1.

In an isosceles spherical

tri-

and the

side

angle, given the base h

a

A

find

;

the angle at the base,

133

Page

Also, cos -4

= tan ^ a

cot a

1— cosa

B

V l-hcosa

the angle at the vertex, and h the altitude.

cos%

1— cos^a

= cos a X

ABA^

be an isosceles triangle, A and A^ being the equal angles, a and a^ the equal sides. Let h the arc of a great circle be drawn from B perpendicular to

Let

116.

1

-I-

a

cos

= cos a J sec^ J a.

AA'. Let

h

and

6

=J6

c

=

co. c

be the given parts.

ABA\ ABA\ ABA\

in triangle

a in triangle

B = ^B in cos

triangle

A = cot a

= sin a sin^ B = esc a = cos a cos A sin

2"

&

tan |

b.

sin ^ B.

Given the side a of a regular

3.

spherical polygon of

sin | b.

the

sec J &.

angle

distance

A

n

sides

;

find

of the polygon, the

H .from

the centre of the

In an equilateral spherical polygon to one of its vertices, and triangle, given the side a find the the distance r from the centre to the middle point of one of its sides. angle A. In the equilat. triangle AA^A^^ draw &rc AC ± to A^A^^. 2.

;

Then given

in

right

triangle

AA^C,

a.

sin ^ J.

= sin

J a esc a cos

a

1

=V^

sma

^'2 (1

— cos a - cos^a)

'2(1

-(-COS a)

/

1

ABDE

In the regular polygon arcs from the vertices A, B, etc., through the centre C, and from Cto M, the middle of one side.

draw 2

^ 1 4- cos

^ sec I

a.

a

134 Then

TRIGONOMETRY.

TEACHEES EDITION. Let AC^ be a cube.

E,equired

AB^D^. The lines AA^ and BB^ determine the plane ABB^A\ and the lines A^D^ and B^C^ determine the the dihedral angle

plane A^D^C^B^- and as

BB'

are

±

to

AA^

and

A' B' and B'C\

spectively, the planes

must be

re-

per-

pendicular. .".

the angle required

is

90°.

E-ABCD-F

be an octaheRequired the dihedral angle

Let dron.

E-BA-F,

Draw ^^and

FK 1. to AB, also

0.2" from intersection of axes. is

Then

EKF the plane angle required. Let

AB=\,

Then

0K= 0.5

(since

0^, OB, and and equal),

0^ are

dicular

and

0E{= OA) = sin

45°

= 0.7071. cot

log

EKO = ^• OE OiT

- 9.69897

OE =0.15051 log cot EKO = 9.84948 colog

perpen-

135

EKO = 54° EKF=^ 2 EKO = 109° Let

AE and DE

44^

9^^.

28^ 18^^.

be two faces of

,

TRIGONOMETEY.

136 log

AC

=

log sin 108°

0.51002

log sin

= 0.23078 = 0.71901 AD ^Z) = 5.2361. J ^Z) = 2.61805.

colog sin

colog sin 36° log

log sin J J. Oi) = log

AD AO

log I colog

= 0.00000 AB ABC = 9.93753

log

=9.97821

DCB = 0.30103 '

ADC = 0.23856 ADC = 1.73204:. AD=^iADC

log

But

=

IAD + colog J. 0.

AC gon

=0.41798

.-.

= 9.51177

a diagonal bf plane penta-

is

ABCDE. sin FCB -.AB:: AC^

|AOi)= 9.92975

log sin

IA0D=

0.86602.

sin

ABC: AC.

AB^mABC sin

58°16^52^^ log

AC>i)=116°33M4^^

AB

=

FCB

0.00000

log sin

ADC= 9.97821

colog sin

FBC = 0.23078

log

= 0.20899

AC-

AC= 1.61804.

AF=^AC

But

= 0.80902. In right triangle sin

Let

AOB, BOC, COD,

be

etc.,

equilateral triangles forming five of

or log sin

the surfaces of a regular icosahe-

log

and let AB, BC, CD, etc. = 1. Kegarding ABCDE as a plane

colog

dron,

pentagon, each angle .-.

ADF=

AFD

— AD

ADF= log Ai^+colog AD. = 9.90796 = 0.06247

Ai^

AD ADF= 9.97043

log sin

= 108°.

ADi^= 69° 5^ 48^^ But ADi^=JA-OD-C. A-OB~C= 138° IF 36^^

A5C=108°, BAC=2>Q°.

.-.

In a triangle of which sides are AB, BC, and ADC (regarding

ADC

as a straight line joining centres of

bases of triangles sin

AOB and

BOC),

DCB :AB:: sin ABC: ADC

A spherical

5.

cal

sides

and equal

diagonals divide right triangles.

AB sin ABC .-.ADC^ s'm DCB

'

square

is

a spheri-

quadrilateral which has equal

of the square, side a.

angles. it

Its

two

into four equal

Find the angle A having given the

TEACHERS EDITION.

B '""fl

137

TRIGONOMETRY.

138

Substituting for cos (180° etc.,

their equals

— cos J.',

-^0-

cos

A^= —

and

— cos A^= cos B^ cos C^ — sin B^ sin C^ cos a^.

cos

Write formulas

and

A

are given,

when

the side b

and a,

when

by

2.

h,

a=

for finding

and

c,

B

are

given. (i.)

By Rule

A = cot 6 tan m = tan 5

By Rule

cosp cos 5

whence .".

cosj9

cos

a seen

Or, since

?i

cos a

(li.)

By

5''.

A^

.5''

sin

cos

c^.

124. find

^=

Q3°15nV^, = 124° 7a7^^ ^=132°17^59^^ 88° 12^ 20^^,

C=

50° 2^

1^^;

c=

4^8^^

59°

17° 57^ 28.5^^.

^{a + b)^10Q°

cos A.

JC=

= cos 71 cosp, = cos a sec n. = cos m cosp, = cos 6 seem. = cos 6 seem. ={c — m),

25°

9M8.5^^

F

0.5^^

logcosJ(&-a) =9.97831 log sec J (a + 5) =0.55536 =9.33100 log cot J (7 log tan J (^ log sec

log sin J

B = tan n cot a,

tan n

= tan

a cos

-S.

II.,

= cos m cosp, cosp = cos b sec m. whence cos a = cos n cosp, cos p = cos a sec w. whence cos b sec m = cos a sec n. m = {c— n), Or, since = cos a sec w cos (c — n). cos 6

+ ^)=

0.86467

H^ + ^) = 0.86868

log cos J (a (7

log cos ^ c

cos b

.•.

sin

Given

I.,

cos

Rule

C^ cos

cos 5''

tan m,

= cos b sec m cos (c— m).

By Rule

whence

5

C^ cos a^;

II.,

cos a

whence

— cos A^

H& - a) =

I.,

cos

whence

(7=

XXV. Page

for finding,

B^ sin

B^= ~ cos J.'' cos (7 + sin J.'' sin

+

Napier's Rules, the side a c,

cos

cos C^

sin

similarly,

- 1, Exercise

1.

B^ 4-

obtain

Multiply by

cos

we

etc.,

+

=9.44464

6)

= 9.62622 = 9.93954 c J = 29° 32^ 9'^

logsinJ(&-a) =9.48900 log CSC J (a + 6) =0.01751 =0.33100 log cot iC log

tanJ(^-^) =

^{B-A)= i{A + B)= A=

9.83751 34° 31^ 24^^

97° 46^ 35^^ 63° 15^ 11^^

.5=132° 17^59^^ c

=

59°

¥ 18'^

TEACHERS EDITION, 3.

Given

l{h

find

= 129° 58^

a =120° 55^ 35^^,

J.

5=

B=

88°12^20^^

3^^

63° 15^ 9^^

c= 55°52^40^^

(7= 47° 42^ V^;

i(a-5)= 16°2F37.5^^ J (a

+

5)

=

104° 33^-57.5^^

J (7= log cos ^ (a log sec

23° 51^

= = =

0.59947

+ B)=

10.93600

-5)

Ha + 5)

log cot J

C

log tan 1{A

0.5^^

9.98205

0.35448

J(^ + ^)=96°36^36^^. log sin

Ka-^)

logcsc-^a + log cot

=9.44976

=0.01419

J)

^C

=0.35448

log tan |(J.-^)

=

9.81843

K^-^) = 33°2F27^^ HA+^)=96°36'36^^.

A = 129° B = 63° log sec J (J.

+

logcosKa + log sin ^

log cos

,5)

= 0.93890 =

9.60675

=9.94618

^-c

c

= 27°56^20^^. = 55° 52^ 40^^.

Given

5

= 63°15a2^^

c

= 47°42' V\

^ = 59°

4^25^^;

15' 9^^.

=9.40053

&)

C Jc

4.

58^ 3^^

find

= 88° 12^ 24^^ C = 55°52'42^^

.5

a = 50° F40'^

+ c)^

139

TRIGONOMETRY.

140 (c- 6) = Kc + ^) =

0.00001

log sin J

colog sin

log cot J

^

=

10.28434

log tan J

(C- .5)=

9.82205

^{Q-B)=

colog cos

log sin h lo g cos

B=

A

;

= cot y cot B, = tan B cos a.

y

II.,

A = cosp sin x, p = COS A CSC X. cos B = cos JO sin y, cos p = COS B CSC y. COS J. CSC = COS B esc y. = C— y, since

.'.

.'.

Or,

cos

= cos^csc?/sin(C—

By Rule

^{B + A) = f c =

33° 21^ 58^^.

2/).

=10.65032

+ a) =10.72585

= =

2-

1

ar,

p = COS ^

.'.

COS

B

cscy

y

=

(7—

9.20915

(7= 80° 41^5.4^^.

J(5-74)=

9.04625

log CSC

H^

-4) =

0.25965

+

=10.65032

log tan Jc' log tan J (J

-a) =

9.95622

-a) = 42° 7^ i(b + a) = 79°21M0^^ 1(6

CSC y.

= COS .4

9.33908

logsin II.,

cos

77° 23^ 24^^.

log cos J c log cos

.'.

COS

6° 23^ 12^^.

i(^ + ^y= 9.74035 logsecJ(&-a) =0.12972

A = C0SJ9 sin cos p = cos ^ CSC X. cos ^ = cos jD sin y,

Or, since

i{B-A)=

log sin

I.,

cos .*.

6=121°28aO^^ C=161°22ai^^

c=154°46^48^^

a;

cot X

Rule

39° 45^0^^,

= cot cot A, = tan A cos 6.

cos b

By

find

a= 37°14a0^^

log tan J (5

a;

.'.

Given

26°58M6^^

log tan I c

a?

cos J. (ii.)

126.

logcosi(^--^)= 9.99730 log sec |(^ + ^) = 0.07823

cos

.'.

2.

^= B=

Page

I.,

cos a

By Rule

= 9.92056 J a = 33° 36^ 30^^ a = 67° 13^

^a

56°1F57^^

1. What are the formnlas for comwhen B, C, and a are puting given and for computing B when A, C, and b are given?

cot

= 9.66376

21^ 12^^

Exercise XXVI.

.'.

A

33°34^37.8^^

C= 123°

By Rule

+ 5) =7.84843 1{C+ B) = 2.40837

logcos J(c

9.53770

esc

= = a

a;.

&

a;,

5 = cos ^ esc X sin (C—

a;).

121° 28^ 10^^ 37° 14^ 10^^.

(7= 161° 22^ 11^^

TEACHERS EDITION. 3,

Given

log cos J

find

^ = 128°4F49^/, a=125°4F44^^ 5= 107° 33^ 20^^ h= 82°47^34^^ c= 124° 12^ 31^^;

1{A-B)=

141

(5 -(7)

log

i(6

10° 34^ 14.5^^.

logsin

=9.97159

log tan J a log cos

9.99257

1{A-^B)=

0.32660

log tan J (a

-c) =9.80021 lih-c) =32° 15M5/^

log tan 1(6

=10.27624

log tan J c

+

5)

log sin J (5 +(7) log sec J (6 -c)

=10.59541

l{a+h) =104° 14^ 38.5^^. log sin i (J. colog sin ^{A log tan

-5)= + B)=

log cos ^ a log cos J

9.26351

= = l{a-l)

logtan|(a-6)

0.05457

9.59432

=

82°47^34^^

^(^ + 5) = 9.94543 colog cos J (a -h) = 0.03118 = 9.67012 log cos ^ c = 9.64673 log cos J a 1(7= 63° 4P.

C=127°22^.

88° 12^ 21^^ 78° 15^ 48^^

5.

J.

Given

find

= 125°4F44^^,

5=

52° 37^ 57^^;

a=

86° 15^5^^;

find 5

= 107°33^20^^ 55°47^40^^' 14^39.5^^.

i(A-C)= =26° J6

18^ 58.5^^

4.5^^.

(^-(7) = 9.96883 i{A + C) = 0.60896

log cos J log sec

= 9.69424

log tan J (a

i{a

+ +

c)

=0.27203

c)

=118° 7^33^^

+

C)

=

88° 12^ 21^^,

A== 78°15M8^^.

i(^+C') = 116°

c

5=

21° 27^

= 152° 43^ 5K^

c=

a = 128°31M6^^,

H^ + C) = 104°

log tan J 6

5 = 153° 17^ &^, C= 78°43^36^^

7^ 54^^.

152° 43^ 51^^.

21° 27^ 5^^

log sin

Given

9.95364

=0.07283 =9.86322

^ = 39°

(7= 82° 47^ 35^^,

4.

=

=9.88969

= = c A= I

a =125°41^44^^. h

^ J

=10.27624

^-c

6/>'.

J(5-C) = 9.78226 log CSC ^5 + C) = 0.04636

1{A + B) = 118° 7^ 34.5^^ =62° 6M5.5^^. Jc

colog cos

9.90074

+ c) =0.23040 + c) = 120° 28^

log tan J (5

(7-127°22^

J (J. - 5) =

=

(^+(7) = 0.35807 tan J a =9.97159

log sec*

0^21^^.

i(5-C)= 37°16M5^^ =43° 7^37.5^^ Ja

log sin J (J. log sec

f(a

log cos J 5

log cos J

9.98644

-c) =0.00743 =9.95248

5

=9.94635 i

^ = 27°

53^ 50^^,

^

;

TRIGONOMETRY.

142

J(A-C) = 9.563i3 log CSC (^+ (7) = 0.01356 = 9.69:124 log tan 16 logsin

Ha - c) =

10° -ZV IS'\

=

128° 31M6^^.

a

-I

log tan i (a

= 107° = B 55°

-c) =9.27093

Exercise XXVII. 1.

Given

Page find

find

a= 73°49^38^^ 5=116°42^30^^ 6

= 120° 53^ 35^^,

A=

c

^1

=

B.^

=

Co

A

log sin

log sin b log CSC a

B

log sin

.5= [180°-

= 116° 102° = ^ {B+A) ^{B-A)= 13° i(5

l{b-a)=

59° 12' 15'^ 55° 42'

=

23° 57' 17.4",

97° 42' 55",

C^=

29°

(a

+

&)

8' 39".

> 180°,

sin -Sj

I.

54' 54^^.

log sin

3V

A

log sin b

58.5^'.

colog sin a log sin 5i

= 9.76524 = 9.85498 = 0.31377 = 9.93399

9.98908

log CSC

0.61892

^1=120°

log tan

Hb-a) =

9.63898

B^=

60°28'43.5'^

c=120°57'27'^

+ a) = 9.99641 logcscH&-a) =0.39873 log tan ^ {B-A) = 9.39401

log sin ^{b

C

9.78915 58° 23^

C=116°47'

= 150° 6 = 134° A = 144°

Given a

47' 45".

59° 12' 15".

=10.24698

^c=

log cot J

>6

= sin .A sin 6 CSC a.

{B+A) = J (5-^) = c

a

42^ 30^^

log sin J

log tan J

8''.

hence two solutions.

47^ 36^^.

+ a)= 97°2F36.5'^ 23°

47M5'^

C,

A > 90°,

(63° 17^ 30^0]

120°

Ci=

¥\

= 9.99992 = 9.93355 = 0.01753 = 9.95100

47^ 40^^

128.

= 120°57^27^^

C=116°47^

88° 52^2^^;

33^ 20^^.

c

57'

4''.

42"

8° 20' 35.5".

=

142° 36' 28.5".

i(^-^i)= 1{A-B^)=

11° 47' 28.5".

\{a

+

b)

;

42° 35' 13.5".

+ 6) = l{a-b) =

log sin i (a

9.78338

log esc

0.83833

log tan J (.4-5i)= 9.31963

log cot J

5",

15' 54",

22'

^ia-b) =

(7i

= 9.94134 }Ci = 48°51'27.7". Ci = 97° 42' 55.4".

TEACHERS EDITION. log sin i{a

+

b)

=

9.78338

143

TRIGONOMETRY.

144 ^ {B

+ A) =

121°

^{B-A)= 1(5- a) = ^{b + a) =

log sin

colog sin

3°59^53^^ 151°

logsmH^+^) colog sin

colog sin ^{b



a)

= =

log cot J

(7

(7= 79°5F47.7^^ = 159° 43^ 35^^

(7

Given 5 c

65° 39^ 46^^;

find

= 100° 2^1.3^^ 5=

90°,

B=

98°30^28^^

a=

95°20^38.7^^;C=148° 5^33^^

c=147°41M3^^

= 9.99811 = 9.99519 = 0.00670 = 0.00000 b = 90°.

= 124° 7^20^^ = 159°53^ 2^^

log CSC

5 A

log sin b

1{A + B)^

99° 16^ 19.7^^.

i{A-B)= Ha - &) =

0° 45^51.7^^ 2° 40^ 19.4^^.

(7= 159° 43^ 35^^.

B

=0.03812

colog sin J.

UA+B) = U^-B) =

9.99428

colog sin log tan

^{a-b) =

8.66904

log tan

^c

log sin

= 9.95959 = 9.92024

log sin a

= 9.91795 b = 124° 7^ 20^^

log sin b

J.

Given

log sin

find

= 123°40nS^^

3.

log sin a

= 9.15200 = 35° 10^ 20^^. C J C=70° 20M0^^

^ = 113°39^2K^

1.87484

=10.53816

Jc=

73° 50^ 51. 7^^

c=147°4F43^^

(5 + ^) = 118° 39^ 49.5^^

iiB-A)= - a) = = (5 + a)

i (5 1

= 9.25234 1

0.15663

log tan J

i

C

=9.92968

9.68433 + «) (5-^) =9.31104

log sin

log cot I

log

5^ 25^^.

= 9.47198 c ^ = 16° 30^ 48^^ 1^36^^. c = 33°

log sin J (5

a=

(5

-a) =8.84443

log tan J c

.S

^-

H^-^) = 0.69787

log tan I (6

2.

+ a) = 9.99842 i{b-a) = 0.31128 tan i(^-^) =8.94264

4:4:\

11° 34^



log tan

colog sin

29° 13^ 52^^. 94° 53^ 33^^.

9.99953 1.33144

log tan J

(^-5) =8.12520

log cot J

C

=9.45617

(5+^) = H-S-^) =

9.94422

1(7= 74°2^46.3^^

1.05901

H6 - a) =

C=148°5^33^^

9.7478 9

log sin 1

colog sin

+ 5) = i{a-b) =

log sin ^ (a

0^ 28.5^^.

log tan J

c

=10.75112 79°56^51^^

Jc= c =

159° 53^

2^^.

4.

Given

38° 0^ 12^^

A = 24° 33^ 9^^ B = a= 65° 20^ 13^^; show

that the triangle

is

impossible.

TEACHERS EDITION, cot X

log cos a log tan

B

=

cos a tan B.

log cos log sec

= 9.62042 = 9.89286 = 9.51328 X = 71° 56^

(c

sin (c

30^^

Since sin is

sin {c

A ^

= 9.95884 = 0.10349

log sin X

log sin log cot X

145

— x) = cos A sec B sin x.

--

9.97806

— x) = 0.04039 — x) = 1.0974. {c — x)';> 1, the angle C

impossible. .-.

Exercise XXIX.

the triangle

Page

131.

is

impossible.

TRIGONOMETEY.

146

^ 5

log tan J

log

A=

=9.75330

= 0.03328 = 0.23927 tan i (7 1 A = 29° 32^

log tan ^

C=

47°

J C = A= B=

60°

2' 26^^

59°

4^ 28^^

36^^

94° 23^ 12'r

C= 120°

4.

3,

Given

A=

20° 9' 54",

= 56° c = 66°

B=

55° 52' 31",

6

19' 40",

b c

= 108°30a4^^ ^=110°10^40^^ c= 84°46^34^^; C= 99°42^24^^

2s

6

5 c

= 131° = 108° = 84°

35^

44"

20'

;

C = 114° 20' 17".

4^ 52^^,

find

a

find

a = 20°16'38",

2l = 132°14^2F^

4^^

99° 42' 24".

Given

a a = 131° 35^

10' 40".

Wr

^B=

IK

132° 14' 21".

^=110°

= = =

= s =

20° 16'

38"

56° 19'

40"

66° 20'

44"

142° 57'

2"

s-a= s-b= s-c=

4^^

30^ 14^^

46^ 34^'

= 324°51^52^^ s = 162° 25' 56'^

71° 28' 31".

51° 11' 53". 8' 51".

15° 5°

7'

47".

2s

log sin

— (s — (s

s-a=^

30° 50' 52''.

log sin

s-b=

53° 55' 42".

log sin

(s

s-c =

77° 39' 22".

log CSC

s

log sin

— a) (s — b) (s — c)

log CSC

s

log sin

log sin

9.70991

(s

9.90756



a)

9.89172

b)

9.41715 8.95139

c)

0.02311

log tan^ r

8.28337

log tan r

9.14168.

9.98984

M

log tan^ r

10.12754

log tan J

5

= 9.24996 = 9.72453

log tan r

10.06377.

log tan i

(7

=

10.19029

=

10° 4' 56.8".

0.52023

log tan J log tan J

A 5

log tan ^

(7

= 0.35386 = 0.15621 = 0.07393

iA=

66°

7^ 10.6".

I5=

55°

5' 20".

I

C=

49° 51/ 12".

log tan

J J.

J 5 = 27°

56' 15.5".

f (7= 57° 10' 8.6". A = 20° 9' 54". .5

= 55°

52' 31".

a= 114°

20' 17".

TEACHERS EDITION.



1.

Given

Exercise

XXX.

Page

147

132.

148

TRIGONOMETRY.

8-A-

TEACHERS EDITION.

= 69° = 120° c = 159° 2 s = 349° s = 174° s-a = 105°

15^

6

42^ 47//

s-b= s-c= -^

-

23^

6.5^^

52° 41^ 33.5^^ 26° 57^ 43^^

=

c)

16^ 26^/

38^ 13^^.

87° 19^

Hs-6)= 1 (s

18^

15° 19^ 40^^.

(s - a) =

7° 39^ 50^^.

=11.32942 ^s log tan |(s- a) =10.11804 log tan

J(s-6)=

9.70645

logtan ^(s-c)=

9.12893

log tan

logtan^J.E'

=10.28284

log tan

=

i~E

IE=

10.14142.

54° 10^

-£;=216° 40^ 3.

Given

4.6^^ 18^^.

find

a= 33° 1^45^^ ^=133° 48^ 53^^. 6 = 155° 5a8^^ = 110° 10^; m = tan a cos C. cose = cos a seem cos (6— m). (7

tan

log tan a log cos log tan

c

m

6-m =

log cos log cos

54)

(^54)

167° 22^ -(12°16^42^0-

= 9.92345 = 0.01064 m (6 - m) = 9.98995 = 9.92404 c c = 147° 5^ 30^^

log cos a log sec

(^

= 9.81300 = 9.53751 = 9.35051

m=

33°

1M5^^

= 155° c = 147° 2s =

5^ 18^^

h

53° 55^ 26^^

=

^s

a=

6'^

a

149

5^ 30^^

TRIGONOMETRY.

150

Exercise XXXII.

Page

148.

What angle 1. Find the dihedi-al angle made rod upon the plane. by the lateral faces of a regular ten- does this line make with the rod ? sided pyramid given the angle A = 18°, made at the vertex by two ;

adjacent lateral edges.

CO

Let

the angle

IF

Sb

be a straight line, making with the plane OH;

A

straight line passing through

B

the vertex of the pyra- the foot of CO, making the angle of CO upon It will with the projection describe a sphere.

About mid,

DO

intersect the lateral surface, forming the plane

a regular spherical decagon, of which the sides

=

18°,

being measured by

the plane angles at the centre.

and

C,

forming an

cal triangle

angle

A

isosceles spheri-

ABC.

Then (by Prob. given side

A

and

Pass a plane through

a

Ex. XXIII.)

3,

= 18°, n =

It

required to find the angle

is

COI==

GH.

X.

AVith

from

a radius equal to unity, a centre, construct the

as

spherical triangle

Then

c=B,

10, to find

d=COI=x

of the polygon. 1

•sm ^

A= A

log cos 18^

colog cos 9°

log sin

A

sec ^ A cos

MiA

I

180°

CEK=-Tt.

-•

Since

= 9.97821 = 0.00538 = 9.98359

OE

is

.'.

2. Through the foot which makes the angle

plane, a straight line

B

the projection of

CO

on the plane OH; CE drawn from C to E, is perpendicular to OE.

CDI =rt.

42^

By Formula cos

angle

angle.

triangle.

74° 21^

A = 148°

the plane.

DCI.

i = A,

This line

is

of

A

a rod with a

.•.

[37],

d=

cos X

cos

i

cos

= cos A

3, Find the volume drawn in makes the lique parallelopipedon

with the projection of the three unequal edges

c.

cos B.

V of ;

a, b,

an ob-

given the c,

and the

TEACHERS EDITION, three angles

I,

m,

make with one /\

n,

which the edges

another.

151

TRIGONOMETRY.

152

= 5.36570

logi:

= 4.68557

log'6-18000

logi?2

logi^

=

7.07312

=

7.12439

i^=

A

5.

latitude

13316560.

thip sails from a harbor in I,

and keeps on the arc of a

great circle.

Her

course (or angle

between the direction in which she sails and the meridian) at starting Find where she will cross the is a. equator, her course at the equator,

and the distance she has

Let

NESW be

the equator,

the earth,

iVand Sthe Let

south poles.

A

from which the ship the

parallel

starts from,

of

its

Then

BAE=a

WCE

nortli

and

be the point starts,

of latitude

and

course.

sailed.

AB the

the

AFD ship

great circle

TEACHERS EDITION.

K

= a X cos = iaV2 = 90°\/2. 90° V2 - 90° = 90°( V2 - 1). Arc

Given the latitudes and longi-

8.

Z

153

tudes of three places on the earth's

and also the radius of the show how to find the area the spherical triangle formed by

surface,

earth of

;

arcs of great circles passing through

The shortest distance d be- the tween two places and their latitudes Find the difI and V are known. 7.

places.

ference between their longitudes.

Let

A

C

Then

position of the other.

m

and

if

one

city,

Let A, 5, and

represent the north pole,

the position of one city,

B the AB = d,

represent the longitude of

mV that

of the other,

I

G

represent the

on

three places

the

earth's surface. I

the

of

positions

how

62 shows

to find the dis-

tance between two places

when

the

and V that of latitudes and difference in longitude the other, angle Cwill be equal to are given. {m-m^), and 5(7 will equal 90°- Z, In this case we have the latitudes and ^Cwill be equal to 90° -^^ given, and also the longitudes so Therefore we have an oblique that we can find the difference in latitude of one city,

;

spherical triangle with three sides longitude. given to find the angle C.

GH = equator

Let

Now from Formula [44], cos c = cos a cos h + sin a sin

h cos C;

tan

then by substituting, cos

d=

cos

(90°-

I)

cos (90°

or cos

sin

cos

I)

(90°— V) cos (m — m^)

;

d = sin I sin V

+ .'.

and from

- V)

+ sin (90° -

X

cos (w

cos

I

cos

then, from

V cos (m — m^).

;

| 54, in triangle

ABC,

m = cot a cos 6, § 62,

BC= sin a sec m sin (5+m),

and the same with the distance between the other places. Therefore,

we have

given

the

— m^) = (cos — sin

Z

sin V)

three sides of a spherical triangle,

X sec

I

sec V.

to find the area.

(i

TRIGONOMETRY.

154

By

[51],

tan^ \

E= tan I

s

tan i (s

— a)

X tan i{s — h) tan J (s — c). Then, since we have the radius of sphere given (= R) and the spherical excess = E, from Formula the

log CSC

s

log sin

(s- a) (s- 5)

log sin

log CSC (s-c) log

tannic tan J

= = = =

0.16409

9.00210 8.56391

0.23716

=17.96726

=

(7

8.98363

1(7=5° 30^ 2^^ (7-11° 0^4^^

F=^TrR\ 180=

-

660.

Difference of time

9. The distance between Paris = Y^5(660) minutes and Berlin (that is, the arc of a = 41 min. great circle between these places) is Time Berlin, at 12 h. 44 mm. eq'ial to 472 geographical miles.

The latitude of Pans is 48° 50^ 13'^; that of Berlin, 52° 30^ 16^^. When

10.

noon at Paris what time

ing 45°,

it is

at Berlin

is it

The I

altitude of the pole besee a star on the horizon

and observe

?

its

azimuth

to be 45°

;

find its polar distance.

AO

Let

of Paris, Berlin.

represent

and Then

BK C

the latitude

the latitude of

represents the dif-

ference in longitude.

iVP=45°.

6M = 6 = 41° 9M7^^ CB = a=2>T 29M4^^

AB==c= 7° 2s= 86° s = 43°

s-a= s-b= s

tan'^

52^

.:PZ = 4:5° = (472

60)

15^ 45.5^^

5° 46^

5^58.5>'>'.

- c = 35°

23^ 45.5^^

C= cscs

sin (s

We

— a) sin (s — b) esc (s — c).

FM^p. PZM^a.

have given two parts of the

triangle,

= 45°. = 45°. cosp = cos a cos a = \/|. cos I = V^. cosp = J. p = 60°. a

(90° -

1.5^^



J

H-

31^31'/

1.

.'.

cos

I.

TEACHEES EDITION. Given the latitude I of the and the declination d of the sun find the local time (apparent solar time) of sunrise and sunset, and also the azimuth of the sun at these times (refraction being neglected). When and where does the sun rise on the longest day of the year (at which time d= -\- 23° 27^) in Boston {I = 42° 2V), and what is the length of the day from sunrise to sunset? Also, find when and where the sun rises in Boston on the shortest day of the year (when (^=- 23° 270, and the length of

Also to find azimuth

11.

observer, ;

this day.

To sun

find the

is

Then, by cos

t

when

a.

MQ measQZM= 180° - a.

PMQ,

In triangle ured by angle

is

[37],

PM= cos PQ cos MQ.

or

- d) = cos (180° - Z) cos (180° - a). sind = — cos (— cos a), cos a = sin sec

Now

cos

Time

of sunrise

cos (90°

I

c?

I,

= — tan d tan

t

I.

= 12

o'clk a.m.

15

Time hour angle

155

of sunset

o'clk P.M.

15

the

on the horizon.

= 9.63726 = 9.95977 = 9.59703 t = 66° 42^ 26^^

log tan

d

log tan

I

log cos

t

12

- — = 7 h.

33 min. 10

sec.

15

= 4 h. 26 min. 50 sec. 15 .*.

shortest

day

= 2 X 4 h. 26 min. 50 sec. = 8 h. 53 min. 40 sec. Again, cos

.-.

PM:= 90° - d. ^Q = 90°. PQ = 90° - -h = 180° Z

log sin d log sec

log cos a

a .-.

cos

or

PMQ, by

in triangle

[39],

QPM== tan PQ cot Pif, cos t = tan(180°-r)cot(90°-tf), cos t = ~ tan tan d. I

I

90°

1.

Then

a

= sin sec = 9.59983 = 0.13133 = 9.73116 = 57° 25^ c?

I.

15^^

a^=122° 34^45^^

Longest day = 12 hrs. -h[(7h. 33min. lOsec.

-4h.

=

26 min. 50

15 h. 6 min. 20

sec.

sec.)]

TRIGONOMETKY.

156 12.

AVlien

is

the solution of the

problem in Example 11 impossible, and for what places is the solution impossible

d has

?

for

maximum

its

value

23° 27^.

Suppose

=

I

66° Sy.

Then tan (180° -

Z)

= - tan

^

= — cot d. = Formula cos t — tan tan d becomes cos t^ — cot d tan d I

= that

is,

-1.

i=180°;

.-.

By

Napier's Rules,

the sun just appears in the sin

south on shortest day.

For places within the Arctic cirI > 66° 33^, and —tan I numerically greater than — cot d.

cle,

Hence

— tan

I

tan

c?

h =&hxl sin

= 9.87209 log sin d = 9.59983 log sin h = 9.47192 Altitude = A = 17° 14^ log sin

>—1

d.

I

35^^

(numerically), or cos

which sun

is

may

t

=

By

± 1+,

= cos 7 tan d. = 9.82424 log cos log tan d = 9.63726 log cot a = 9.46150 Azimuth = a = 73° 5V W\ cot a

not possible. Hence the during 24 hours.

fail to rise

I

13. Given the latitude of a place and the sun's declination find his altitude and azimuth at 6 o'clock ;

A.M. (neglecting refraction).

Napier's Rules,

Com-

14. How does the altitude of the pute the results for the longest day sun at 6 a.m. on a given day change of the year at Munich {I = 48° 9^. as we go from the equator to the a. pole ? At what time of the year is

FZM=

FZ=dO°-l PJf=90° -d=p.

ZPM= ZM= 90° - h. t.

I

= 48°

9^

Sun's declination on longest day, 23° 27^.

a maximum at a given (Given sin A = sin Z sin d.) it

The

farther

'place ?

the place from the

equator, the greater the sun's alti-

tude at 6 A.M. in summer.

equator it is

it is 0°.

At

At

the

the north pole

equal to the sun's declination.

At a given

place, the sun's altitude

TEACHERS

157

EDITION".

And from ^ 65, the times of bearat 6 A.M. is a maximum on the longest day of the year, and then ing due east and west are sin h = sinl sin e (where e = 23° 27''). 12 A.M. and p.m., 15 15 15. Given the latitude of a place



north of the equator, and the dec- respectively. lination of the sun find the time of Since the day given is the longest day when the sun bears due east day of the year, the declination of and due west. Compute the results the sun = 23° 27^ ;

for

the longest day at St. Peters{I = 59° 560I

d=

we have given

.*.

burg

= 59°

56^

to find

cos

t

=

log cot

I

= 9.76261

Now

cot

23°

27''

and

t.

tan d.

I

log tan cZ= 9.63726

log cos

t t

.*.

= 9.39987 = 75° 27^

=6

12

24^^

hrs. 58 min. A.M.,

15

— = 5 hrs.

and

2 min. p.m.

15

Let zenith,

NESWhQ the horizon, ^ the NZS the meridian, WZE

WAE

the prime vertical, noctial,

P the

elevated pole,

position of the sun

MB

its

the equi-

declination,

M the

when due and

east,

ZPM

its

16. Apply Example 15

the case

the general result in (cos

when

=

t

cot

I

tan d) to

the days and nights

are equal in length (that

is,

when

d = 0°). Why can the sun in summer never be due east before 6 a.m.,

hour angle. Then we have the right spherical or due west after 6 p.m. ? How triangle PZM, with and PZ does the time of bearing due east and due west change with the decliknown, to find ZPM. nation of the sun ? Apply the genGiven I and c?, to find U eral result to the cases where I
PM

PM=

PZ=dO°-l

From cos

^ 48,

Case

the north pole

II.,

5= tana cote.

Substitute in this equation,

or .'.

cos

t

cos

t

cos

t

= tan PZ cot PM, = tan (90°- cot (90°- d). = cot tan d. 1)

I

When

?

and nights are and ^ = 90°;

the days

equal, c?=0°, cosi=0°,

that

is,

the sun

and due west at d must both be

is

due east at 6 a.m.

G p.m. less

Since

I

and

than 90°, cos

t

cannot be negative therefore t cannot be greater than 90°. As d ;

TRIGONOMETRY.

158 increases,

decreases

t

;

that

both

times in question

the

is,

.'.

approach

sin

d^sinl

sin

I

sin h.

= sin dcsch.

noon.

lfl
this

cos

i

>1

therefore

;

If

impossible.

is

= d,

1

i

the

pole,

= 90°;

Z

=

90°,

cosi=

therefore the sun

in

mer always bears due east and due west at 6 p.m.

0°,

sum-

OB is due north. OB make with the

direction

angle will

shadow

OA

of

on the plane, at 1

P.M.

at 6 a.m.

Given the sun's declination when he bears due

17.

and

MI^

What

;

a point

in a horizontal a staff OA is fixed, so that its angle of inclination AOB with the plane is equal to the latitude of the place, 51° 30^ N., and

then cost=l, and t = 0°; that is, the times both coincide with noon. The explanation of this result is, that the sun at noon is in the the zenith hence, on the prime vertical, at

At

18.

plane

his altitude

east; find

the latitude

of the ob-

server.

N Given direction of OB due north, 30^= I, and plane

MN

AOB = 51° horizontal

;

Produce

BOC.

to find

OA

;

it

will pass

through

The sun being on the equinoctial, FOS = 90°, and the shadow 00 will lie in the plane of the pole.

this angle.

MJSF;

it

Draw OZ

JL

to

plane

will lie in the plane of

OB

and OA. In the figure of observer,

let

F the

Z be

the zenith

elevated pole,

M

the position of the sun.

ZM= 90° - h. FM= 90° - d.

Then

..CAB=\b°.

ABO= 90°, jection of

FZ=dO°-l. Since the sun

MZF /.

is

M bears

due

OA

since

by Napier's Kules,

FM= cos FZ cos MZ.

30^,

ure of plane angle

Then

is

the pro-

MN.

being the meas-

AOB.

in right spherical triangle

ABC, by tan

OB

on plane

Arc AB = 51° east,

a right angle.

cos

SFZ = hour angle of sun at 1 p.m. = 15°. SFZ = CAB, being vertical angles.

[41],

BC^ tan BAGs'm

AB.

159

TEACHERS EDITION. log tan 15°

=9.42805

log sin 51° 30^

= 9.89354 = 9.32159 = 11° 50^ 35^^

BQ BO

log tan

Arc

20. At a certain place the sun is observed to rise exactly in the northeast point on the longest day of the

year

When

Arc -SC measures plane angle BOC. .:

BOC= 11°

50^ 35^^

east

a

the sun rises in the northon the longest day of the year,

= 45°, To

What

the direction of a wall in latitude 52° 30^ N. which casts no shadow at 6 a.m. on the 19.

find the latitude of the place.

;

c?=23° 27^

find

is

a

cos

log sec

In the formula

I.

I

= sin d sec = log cos a + log esc d. I.

= 9.84949

log cos 45°

longest day of the year.

log CSC 23° 27^ log sec

I

= 0.40017 = 0.24966 I = 55° 45^ 6^^.

Find the latitude of the place which the sun sets at 10 o'clock

21. at

on the longest day. Since the sun sets at 10 o'clock, is equal

the hour angle of the sun to 15° X 10 = 150°.

The declination The wall must

lie in

ing through the sun, in order that

may

cast

In the

it

.'.

we have

no shadow.

parts given

figure,

and

PZ= 90° -I PM= 90° - d.

By sin

cot

V)

cos

Or,

I

cot re

= tan {90° -d) cot MZP. = cot d cot X. = cos tan Z

I

log tan

e

= 9.78445 = 9.63726

log cot

a;

=9.42171

X

=

75° 12^ 38^^.

the triangle two

in viz.,

I

the angle

ZPM,

= cos cot d. = 150°.

d= log

log

e.

log cos

;

t

22.

t

23° 27^

= 9.93753 cot £? = 0.36274 cot I = 0.30027 I = 63° 23^ 41^^

log cos

[41],

(90°-

equal

In the formula,

irZP=a;.

find

is

ifP= 90° -d

ZPD = 6 X 15°= 90°. To

of the sun

the line pass- to 23° 27^.

t

To what does the general

for the hour angle, in ^ 67, become when (i.) h = 0°, (ii.) I = 0° and c? = 0°, (iii.) Zor c? = 90°.

formula

TEIGONOMETRY.

160 In the general formula, /i

= 0.

§ 67, let

(11.)

Then sin

sin I

i



[cos J(Z

X sin i

^-

sin J (Z

-4

+p) sec I cscp]^.

h—

^

2-

p)

cos

= v/sin(s— J)sin(s— c)csc h csc Z = 0.

c.

d=0.

t

t

FZ =90° -I =90° = Pif - dO°-d = 90° = 6. e.

cos

.^I±£2^(U£). j(;+rt =

sin I

sec

Z

ii+p)^^^j '-^°f^pl

sinp

I

Substitute these values in the

first

equation,

— cos ^ ^

/

+cos(? +

l

~^

p)

sin ^

i

2

^ Jl_-cos_(Z_+^) X cos

I

t.

i

— cos i = sin

I

= Vsin J (90°- h) sin J (90°-;^) = sin J (90° -/i). = sin (90° - h). sin t=90°-h = z. ^

sinp

— cos = Vl — cos^ COS

1

= a.

Substitute

2

1

90° -?i

s-b = ^ (90° - A). s-c = ^ (90° - ^). csc b = csc 90° = 1. csc c = csc 90° = 1.

=

cscp

cos

1

^ir= A=

(iii.) {I

+p)

Zor(?=90°.

PZ=90°-2 = 0° = a.

smp

(I

+ p)

.•.

no triangle will be made.

.•.

answer indeterminate.

Pir= 90° -cZ=0° = COS

= (sin

Isinp I

cosp

+ COS I sinp)

x^L_ smp COS

I

= tan coip + 1. = — tan cot j3. I

COS

and

Z

cot j3 cos

i

= tan d, = — tan

no triangle formed.

.*.

result indeterminate.

23.

What

mula

for the

6.

does the general for-

azimuth of a celestial 68, become when t = 90°

body, in § = 6 hours ?

When t = 90°, m = 0, and we have

_p-90°-d

But .*.

t

/.

a right spherical triangle with the two legs given to- find the angle I

tan

d

opposite one of the legs.

161

TEACHERS EDITION. Then by

substituting the values

of the given parts in the formula,

II.

If (2=0°.

From

B = tan h esc a,

tan

§ 69,

cos

I

=

we have tana =cot(Zsec^.

or

tancZ

= tan (90°-c?) esc (90°-Z)

tan a

cot a

= tan

and cot a 24.

Show

§ 69, if

t

d

sec

Multiply

cos

i

that the formulas of lead to the equation

= 90°,

and that Z = sin A esc cZ they lead to the equation sin

;

cos

I.

I

= sin h

sec

if

cZ

= 0°,

t.

If< = 90°.

From

g 69,

sin

^

MQ.

(1)

sin

d= cosm cos MQ.

(2)

Divide

but

= cos n

(1)

sin

^

sin

cZ

now

by

cos

(2),

n cosm cos

n = ZP=90°-

m = 0°.

and sin

h

sin

d

sin

Z

.'.

.'.

= sm

Z.

= sin

A esc



Z

cos

tanm

Z.

7

cZ.

m sin h esc

cos

t

=

tanm

cos

tan a

COS

t

(3)

by cos

(4),

m sin h

c?.

(3) (4)

TRIGONOMETRY.

162 log cot

fZ

log cos

t

log tan

m

= = =

0.10719

10.05196

m = 48° sin

h

c?

=

t

= 22° = 15°

9.94477

25^ 10^^

= sin (Z + m) sin d sec m, ^

(Z+m)= 9.99206 = 9.78934 sin d seem =0.17804

90°

log

log sin h

h

d t

log tan

m

=10.37792

= 9.95944 - 10 = 65° 37^ 20^.

log sin

d

= 9.94351 = 9.57387 = 0.41302 = 9.93040 h = 58° 25^ 15^^.

log sec

m

polar distance of star 67° 59^ 5^^ its hour angle 15° 8^ 20'''',

12'''';

find its altitude

16^ 22^^

log sin (l+m)

Given latitude of place 51°

26.

0^ 55^^. 8^ 12^^.

m = 67°

log sin h

19''

59^ 5^0-

= 10.39326 = 9.98466

log cot

log cos

log sin

log

- (67°

and

its azi-

muth.

log sec {l+m) log tan

t

log sin

m

log

= 0,32001 = 9.43218 = 9.96490 =9.71709

tana a

= 152°

28^.

Given the declination of a 54^ its altitude 22° 45^ 12^^ its azimuth 129° 45^ 37^^ find its hour angle and the latitude of the 27.

star 7°

;

observer. sin

t

= 8ma

PM= polar distance of star.

ZPM= hour angle of star. PZ = co-latitude of observer. Find PZM= azimuth of

and

DM

its

log sin

d t

star,

altitude.

t

d=90°- PM. Let PQ = m. tan m = cot d cos sin h = sin {I + m) sin d sec m. tan a = sec {I + m) tan sin m. = 51° 19^ 20^^. t.

t

sec d.

= 45° 42^

m = cot d cos cos n = cos m sin h esc d. tan

Let

I

log cos h colog cos

h

= 9.88577 = 9.96482 = 0.00414 = 9.85473

log sin a

Given

cos

t.

I

=90°-(m±7i).

= 10.85773 = 9.84411 m = 10.70184 m = 78° 45^ 45^^.

log cot

d

log cos

t

log tan

TEACHERS EDITION.

=

log cos TO

log cos

29. Given the obliquity

9.28976

= 9.58745 = 0.86187

log sin h

log CSC

d

a star 51°, its

W

39^^.

m-n = 12° V

Q'\

90° _ (m

- w) = 67° = 67° .-.

Z

= 23°

ecliptic e

= 9.73908 n = 56°

n

163

longitude 315°; find

its

declination and

its

right ascen-

sion.

In Fig.

given

47,

VT= 315°

58^ 54^^

or

- 45°,

TM= 51°,

58^ 54^^.

i2Fr= 23° 27^

d,

= 23°

27^

;

BM=

r.

In right triangle cos

and

VM= cos

log cos 51°

log cos

P represent the equinoctial A VB, S the let

position of the sun,

and

Q

the pole

EVF. VS = u.

of the ecliptic

Then

VB = r.

Then by [38],

in the right triangle

sin

or

Also by cos

or

d

= tan r cot u. tan r = tan u cos e.

= 10.09163 = 0.15051 (n) log CSC 315° log tan MVT = 10.24214 in) MVT- - (60° 12^ 14.5^0-

B VM,

= 23° 27^-(60° 12^ 14.5^0 = - (36° 45^ 14.5^0By

[38],

sin

log sin

[39],

cos e

VM VM= 63° 34^ 36^^.

log tan 51°

B VS,

sm u sm e.

BVS= tan B Fcot

FT.

BVM=BVT+ TVM

SB = sin VS X sin B VS,

sin

FT'cos TM,

MT esc

= 9.84949 = 9.79887 = 9.64836

In right triangle

8R = d. RVS=e.

VTM,

tan ili'FT^ tan

log cos 315°

pole of the

d.

find the declination

and the right ascension

In the figure

,

VB^r

Given the longitude u of the to find sun, and the obliquity of the eclip- and 28.

tic e

of the

27^, the latitude of

VS,

BM= sin FJf sin B VM. VM = 9.95208

log sin i? log sin

FIT =9.77698

BM

= 9.72906

BM=d=2>2°2¥l2^'.

«

TRIGONOMETRY.

164 Also,

by

sin .

=9.80257

logcoti^FJlf

= 0.12677 (n) = 9.92934 {n)

log

sm

VB

Fi^= -(58° Fi2

{A-B) =

9.93528

%m^{A+B) =

0.00735

log sin J

[41],

VB = tan BM cot E VM.

log tan i^lf

.-.

;

11^ 43^0-

= 360° -58° IIMS^^ = 301°48M7^^

colog

=9.61897

log tan J c log tan

J(a- 6) = ^(a-6)

.-.

a

90°

=

9.56160

= 20°

1'21.5".

69° 11' 48".

- 69°

11'

48"=

20° 48' 12".

31. Given latitude of place 51° 30. Given the latitude of a place 31' 48", altitude of sun west of the 44° 50^ 14^^ the azimuth of a star meridian 35° 14' 27", its declina138° 58^ 43^^ and its hour angle tion +21° 27' find the local ap20°; find its declination. parent time. ;

Byi67,

P^=90°-?, Pir= 90° -(Z = p,

ZM= 90° - A required

t

= ZBM.

p = 68° 33'. J(Z + A+^) = 77°39'37.5". J(Z-/i+p) = 42° 25' 10.5".

= 90° - 44° 50' 14^' = 45° 9' 46^'. = A 138° 58' 43''. B = 20°. 1{A-B)== 59° 29' 22". 'l{A-\-B) = 79° 29' 22". Given

J

c

=22°

c

log

cosJ(^+P + ^)= 9.32982

log sin

J(Z+_p-A)=

9.82901

= =

0.20614

colog cosZ

colog sinp

2 )19.39614

=

log sin I

J

^

34' 53". t

log

cosJ(^-5) = 9.70560

colog cos

jU+^) = 0.73893

=

= 29° = 59°

9.69807

55' 55.5". 51' 51".

3 h. 59 min. 27f sec. p.m.

15

=9.61897

log tan J c

= 0.06350 Ha + &) = 49° 10' 26".

log tan J (a

0.03117

+

5)

Given latitude of place ?, the p of a star, and its altitude h find its azimuth a. 32.

polar distance :

I

TEACHERS EDITION. cos

165

^A= Vsin s sin (s— a) esc b esc c.

A^ FZM or a,

Let

a=p, b c

= 90°- h, = 90°- I

Then

= sm[90°-} (l+h-p)] = cos J (h + l—p).

sin s

sin (s-a)

Altitude Co- latitude

Polar distance

Azimuth

= ZM= 90°- h. = FZ = 90°= FM = 90° -d=p. = FZM oi a.

CSC b

1.

= esc

esc c .'.

cos I a

= sin [90°- H^+^+P)]

= cos J(/i + ^+p). = CSC (90°— A) = sec h. (90°—

l)

=

sec

I.

=

Vcos|(_p+A+^)cos|(/i+^-p)sec^secA

SUEYETI.N-G.

Exercise 1.

Page

I.

Required the area of a triangular

and 15

13, 14,

143.

whose

field

sides are respectively

chains.

= Vs{s — a) (s — 6) (s — c). s = i(13 + 14 + 15) = 21, s-a = 21 -13 = 8, Area

Area

2.

= V21 x 8 x 7 X 6 = VS^ x 7^ X = 84 sq. ch. = 8.4 A. = 8 A. 64 p.

Required the area of a triangular

20, 30,

s- 5 = 21 -14 = 7, s-c = 21 -15 = 6.

and 40

field

2*

=3X7X

whose

2^

sides are respectively

chains.

= V45 x 25 x 15 x 5 = V3=* X 5^ = 3 x 5 V3 x 5 = 75 VTS = 290.4737+. 290.4737 sq. ch. = 29.04737 a. = 29 a. 7.579 p. = 29 a. 7f p., nearly. Area

3.

and

Required the area of a triangular

Area = J base X altitude. Area = J X 12.6 X 6.4 = 40.32 4.

whose base

is

12.60 chains,

sq. ch.

=

4.032 A.

= 4 A. b^^j p.

Required the area of a triangular

and 3.70

chains, respectively,

Area Area

5.

field

altitude 6.40 chains.

field which has two and the included angle 60°.

= ^bc sin A. = ^ x 4.5 x 3.7 X 0.866 = = 115/oP., nearly.

Required the area of a

field in

7.20945 sq. ch.

= 0.7209 a.

the form of a trapezium, one of

and the two perpendiculars upon onal from the opposite vertices 4.50 and 3.25 chains. whose diagonals

Area .

=

is

J

9 chains,

X

= 3 A.

9 (4.5 78

p.

+

3.25)

sides 4.50

= 34.875 sq. ch. = 3.4875 a.

this diag-

SURVEYING.

168 6.

Required the area of the

chains,

FF^=6A0

chains,

CC^= 4

chains,

field

ABCDEF (¥ig.

BE= 13.75

chains,

and AA^=4:.15

chains.

chains,

2area^i^.£'

=

6.4x9.25

BDFA = 13.75 (4.75 + 2zxQ2iBDC =10x4 2 area ABCDBF area ABCDFF 2 area

130.38125

7.

FF'=

=

sq. ch.

Required the area of the

=

13.038125

field

DD^=

= 7) =

19), if

^^=9.25

7 chains,

DB= 10

59.2

161.5625

=40

a.

= 260.7625 = 130.38125 = 13 a. 6j\ p.

ABCDEF (Fig. 20), if AF^--^ 4 chains,

EE'= 6.50 chains, AE^= 9 chains, AD = 14 chains, AQ' AB^= 6.50 chains, BB^= 7 chains, CC^=Q.7o chains.

6 chains,

10 chains,

2 area

Tli^i^''

2&YesLEE'B 2 area

ABB^

=24

=4x6

2areai^''^^^i^=5(6 +

= = =

6.5)

=6.5x5 = 6.5 x 7

62.5

32.5 45.5

BCC'B^ = 3.5 (7 + 6.75) = 48.125 = 27 2areaaDC^ =6.75x4

2 area

2 area area

ABCDEF ABCDEF

119.8125

8.

sq. ch.

= 11.98125 a.

Required the area of the

AC= 5,

BB^

dicular from

AGBCD (Fig. 15), if the diagonal from B to AC) = 1, DD^ (the perpen-

field

(the perpendicular

D to AC)^ 1.60, EE'= 0.25,

= 0.52, KK'=OM, AE^ = 0.2, S^K'^'-Om, and ^^^ = 0.40.

= 239.625 = 119.8125 = 11 a. 157 p.

FF'= 0.25, GG'=

=13. =5(1+1.6) = 0.05 = 0.25 x 0.2 2 3.vesiEE'F'F =0.5(0.25 + 0.25)= 0.25 2&reiiFF'G'G =0.45(0.25 + 0.6)= 0.3825 2sirea,ADCB 2 area

AEE'

=

0.504

2 area ^.ff^ir'ir= 0.6 (0.52 + 0.54)=

0.636

=

0.216

= =

15.0385

2 area (?G^i7^^ 2 9^vesi,KK'B

2 area Sivesi

0.60,

HM'

E^F^^O.bO, F^G^=0A5, G^H^=0A5,

=

0.45(0.6 +0.52)

=0.4x0.54

ADCBKHGFE ADCBKHGFE

7.51925.

TEACHERS EDITION. Required the area of the

9.

field

169

AOBCD (Fig.

16),

iiAD = Z,AC

= 5, AB=Q, angle i)J.a= 45°, angle ^4C=30°, ^^^=0.75, AF^=2.2b, AE= 2.53, AG'= 3.15, EE'= 0.60, FF'=^ 0.40, and 0Q'= 0.75. 2 area

^1)05 =

2q.xq2.EGB

3

X

5

X

0.7071

+

5

x

6

x

= 25.6065 = 2.6025

0.5

=0.75x3.47

2s,Yea,AI)CBGE

=28.2090

AEFH= 0.75 x 0.6 + 1.5(0.6 + 0.4) + 0.4 x 0.28 = 2.062 = 26.147 2 area ADCBGHFE = 13.0735. area ADCBGHFE 2 area

Determine the area of the

10.

F and P^

if

PP'=

PP'G = PP^P =

angle

Area

ABCD from

89° 35^

angle

185° 30^ 309° 15^

PP^A = PP^i) = 349°



field

two

interior stations

1.50 chains,

P^PB^ = P^PD = P'PC = P''P^

45^



35^

113° 45^, 165° 40^ 303° 15^

= A PAD + A PCD + A PPC+ A PAB.

ZPP'D= ZPDP'=

10° 15^ 4° 5^

ZPP^P =

174° 30^

PD = PP' sin

Z PPM = 50° 45^ ZP^P^ = 15° 30^

ZPBF=

PP^P>

PDF' = 0.17609 log PP^ log sin PP^D = 9.25028 colog sin PDP^ = 1.14748

ZPP'C-

ZPCP^-- 33°

PD

= 0.57385

PC = PP'smPP'C sin

PCP^

=

0.17609

log sin

PP^C =

9.99999

colog sin

PCP^ =

0.25621

log

log

PP^

PC

= 0.43229

40^.

1°55^

PA = PP^ sin

sin

log

89° 35^,

sin

log

PP^

log sin

PPM

PAF^

= 0.17609

PPM =9.88896

PAP^= 0.57310 = 0.63815 PA

colog sin log

PB

PP' sm PP'B sm PBP^

= log sin PP^B = colog sin PBP^ = log

log

PP^

PB

0.17609

8.98157 1.47566

= 0.63332

Z ^Pi) = 51° 55^ ZZ>PC= 137° 35^ ZPPC=60°20^ Z^PP = 110°10^

SURVEYING.

170

FAD = PDxPA sin APD. = 0.57385 log PD

log

log

APD = 9.89604

log sin

=

log 2 area

P^i) =

2 area 2 area

log Pi)

= 0.63815

PA

log

log sin

= 0.57385 = 0.43229 DPC = 9.82899

1.10804

log 2 area

12.825.

2

2 area

Sires.

log

APB = 9.97252

log

log 2 area

=

2areaP^P

=17.538.

log

1.24399

= 0.83513

PCD

=6.8412.

PBC= PCx PB sin PPC.

= 0.63815 = 0.63332

P^ PB

PC

log sin

P^P = PAxPB sin ^PP.

log

= PD x P(7sin PPC.

2 area PCZ)

2 area

= 0.43229 = 0.63332 sin PBC = 9.93898

PC PB

=

log 2 area

1.00459

2areaPP(7 =10.106.

A P^P> = 12.825 A PCD = 6.841 2 A PBC = 10.106

2 2

2APAB

=17.538

2ABCD =47.310 ABCD = 23.655 sq. 23.655 11.

sq. ch.

=

2.3655 a.

Determine the area of the

P and P\

PP^= 1.50 angle P'PB = P'PA = P^PC = if

P^PD =

field

= 2 A.

ch.

58^- p., nearly.

ABCD from

two exterior

stations

chains.

41° 10^ 55° 45^

angle

77° 20^

104° 45^

PP'D = PP'C = PP^B = PP^A =

66° 45^ 95° 40^ 132° 15^

103°

0^

= (A P^CP + A P'CD) - (A P^^P + A P'AD). ZP^PC= ZP^PP = 104° 45^ ZP''PP = 41° 10^ ZPCP'= Z PDP' = 8° 30^ ZPBP'= 6°35^ ZPAP' = 21° 15^ Z P^P^ = 55° 45^ Area

P'B =

PP'

log

= 0.17609 P^PP= 9.81839 PBP^ = 0.94063

PP^

log sin

colog sin log

P^PP PBP^

sin

sin

P'B

0.93511

P'D =

PP^

PP^

P^PD PPP^

= 0.17609

P^PD = sin PPP^ =

9.98545

=

0.99184

log sin

colog log



sin

sin

log

77° 20^

P'D

0.83030

0'.

i

TEACHERS EDITION. P'G log

FF' sin P'PQ sm PCP^

colog sin log

2 area

= 0.17609 P^PC= 9.98930 PCP^ = 0.91411

PP'

log sin

P^C

1.07950

P^CP

log

P^P

PM

2

P'PA

log

P'A

= 0.53415

P^AB

A P^CP A P^CP

= P^Cx P^Psin CP^P. log P'C = 1.07950 log P'B = 0.99184 log sin CP^n = 9.68443

1.78985

log 2 area

2 area

=0.93511

15^

2 area P'^CP

61.639.

= 0.53415 sin ^P^P= 9.68897

log 2 area

2

log

colog P^P''

= 0.17609 = 9.91729 = 0.44077

Z ^P^i) = 36°

log

2 area

PP^

Z^P''P = 29°15^

PMP =P^P x P'A sin ^P^P. log

log

ZPP^C=36°35^

P^CP = P^Cx P^B sin PP'^O. = 1.07950 log P^C = 0.93511 log P'B log sin PP^ (7 =9.77524 2 area

p^^ _ PP' sin P'PA sm P^P-'

ZCP''i) = 28° 55^

log 2 area

2 area

=

171

=

1.75577

P^CP = 56.986.

172

SURVEYING.

Exercise

II.

1.

Page

152.

TEACHERS EDITION.

3.

irs

174

SURVEYING.

5.

TEACHERS EDITION. 6.

175

176

SUEVEYING.

7.

TEACHEES EDITION.

9.

1 2

3 4 5 1

177

178

SUHVEYING.

Exercise HI. 1.

Page

163.

179

teachers' edition.

Page

Exercise IV. From

1.

by a

line

ABCB,

the square

EF parallel

to

E.

3 a.

= 64 =30

AB From

1 E. 32 p.

line

2

24

p.,

part off 3 A.

R.

32

A. 3 R.

25

;

Voi =

8 ch.

= AB.

sq. ch.

n. 24 P., part off 2 A. Then, from the remain-

containing 8 a. 1

AI)=7

to

off 2 a. 3 r.

8 A. 1 R. 24

2 A. 1

sq. ch.

ABCD,

^i^ parallel

der of the rectangle part

r.

8

the rectangle

by a

containing 6 a. 1

AB.

6 A. 1 R. 24

2.

161.

25

p.

ch.

by a

line

GE parallel to IJB.

= 84 sq. ch. = ABCB. p. = 24.5 sq. ch. = AEFD. p. = 29.0625 sq. ch. = EBHQ. p.

AE = ^^^='-^^3.5ch. AD 7 A^CD^84^^2ch.

AD EB

7

=AB-AE =12- 3.5 = 8.5 ch. ^ EBHG ^2jm25 ^ 3 ^^

EB

Part

3.

by a

line

off

6 A. 3 e. 12

EF parallel 6

A.

to

3 R. 12

p. ;

=

containing 15 A.

10 ch.

= ABFE. ch. = ABCD.

68.25 sq. ch.

= 150 sq.

15 A.

nearly.

ABCD,

from a rectangle

AB AD being p.

^h..

8.5

= '-^ = 15ch. AB=^^^ 10 AD

^^ = ^^^=68^ = 4.55ch. AB

From a square ABCD, whose

4.

which side

15

shall contain 2 a. 1 r. 36

AD. 2

A. 1 R. 36 p.

AB

p.,

side

by a

= 24.75 sq. 9

is

line

ch.

9 ch., part off a triangle

BE

drawn from

B to

the

;;

SURVEYING.

180

5. From ABCD, representing a rectangle, whose length is 12.65 ch., and breadth 7.58 ch., part off a trapezoid which shall contain 7 A. 3 e. 24 p., by a line BE drawn from B to the side DO.

7 A. 3 E. 24

=

p.

79 sq. ch.

ABCD = 12.65 X 7.58 = 95.887 sq. A BCE= 95.887 - 79 = 16.887 sq. .r^55. = 2BCE = 2x16.887 = 4.456 CE 7.58 BC .

6.

part

2 E. 16

p.,

ch. .

ch.,

,

nearly. ^

AB = 12 ch., AC= 10 ch.,

In the triangle ABC, off 1 A.

ch.

by the

line DjE" parallel to

and

5C= 8

ch.

AB.

1 A. 2 E. 16 p. == 16 sq. ch.

CAB = Vl5x 3x5x7 = 39.6863 sq. ch. CDE = CAB - ABED = 39.6863 - 16 = 23.6863 CAB CDE :: CA^ CD'

sq. ch.

:

:

:

39.6863

:

:

CB^

23.6863

:

:

:

:

CE\ 10^ CD\ 82; CE\ :

:

.'.

CD =

.-.

C^-6.18

7.725 ch. ch.

AD = CA- CD =10- 7.725 = 2.275 ch. BE = CB - CE = 8 - 6.18 = 1.82 ch. 7.

In the triangle ABC,

part off 6 A. 1

E.

6 A. 1

24

E.

p.,

24

by

= 64

p.

AB=2Q ch., AC = 20

the line

ch.,

and

:

:

16 ch.

sq. ch.

CAB = V31x5x 11x15 = 159.9218 sq. ch. CDE^ CAB - ABED = 159.9218 - 64 = 95.9218 CAB CDE CA" CD" :

BC=

DE parallel to AB.

:

sq. ch.

teachers' edition. Since the

tr'

angles have the same altitude, they are to each other as

Hence

their bases.

181

it is

only necessary to divide the base 10 into the

three parts, 2 ch., 3 ch., 5 ch.

9.

Divide the five-sided

ABCHE

field

among

three persons, X, Y,

and Z, in proportion to their claims, X paying ^500, Y paying! 750, and Z paying % 1000, so that each may have the use of an interior pond, at P, the quality of the land being equal throughout. Given AB = 8.64 = 6.S2 ch., and ^^ = 9.90 ch. ch., ^(7=8.27 ch., CZr= 8.06 ch., The perpendicular FD upon ^^-5.60 ch., FB^ upon ^C=6.08 ch., FB^^ upon CH^ 4.80 ch., FB''^ upon HE^bA^ ch., and FB^^^^ upon as the divisional fence between X's and Z's EA = 5.40 ch. Assume shares it is required to determine the position of the fences and and and shares Y's Z's shares, PiV between X's and Y's respectively.

HU

FH

FM

;

If

Pbe joined

to the vertices, the field

is

divided into triangles, whose

bases are the sides, and the altitudes the given perpendiculars sides

AFB = 8.64 X 2.80 =

24.1920

BFC = 8.27 X

25.1408

= CFH = 8.06 X 2.40 = JTFE = 6.82 X 2.72 = EFA = 9.90 X 2.70 = 3.04

ABCHE 2, 3, 4.

9

FH'is assumed

FHE

is less

19.3440

18.5504

26.7300

must be divided as the numbers 500,

sq. ch.

+

113.9572

as the line

3

+

=

4

9.

:

:

2

:

25.3238

sq. ch.

:

:

3

:

37.9857

sq. ch.

:

:

4

:

50.6476

sq. ch.

between X's and

than X's share by 25.3238

= X's = Y's = Z's

share. share. share.

Z's shares.

- 18.5504 =

Since the

6.7734

then 6.7734

,.

tri-

sq. ch.,

must be taken from the triangle FEA. The area of sq. ch., and the altitude Pi)^^/^ = 5.40.

this difference is

:

2

sq. ch.

=113.9572

The whole area 113.9572 750, 1000, or as

angle

upon the

from P.

FEM

^J/=2P^^=2xa773_4^ 2.5087 ch. FB''^^

5.40

PMA = FEA - FEM= 26.7300 - 6.7734 = 19.9566. sq. ch. Since Y's share

+ FAB (44.1486),

is

greater than

the point iV^is on

FMA (19.9566) AB.

and

less

than

FMA

SURVEYING.

182

PMA equals PAN;

Y's share diminished by

that

FAN= 37.9857 - 19.9566 = 18.0291

sq. ch.

^^^2P4i^^2xiM291 = 6.439 FD 5.60 10.

Divide the triangular

ABO, whose

field

ch.

sides

AB, AC, and

and 10 ch., respectively, into three equal and Di^ parallel to BC.

are 15, 12,

EG

is,

ABC =

X

\/18.5

ADF = ^ AEG = I

of 59.81169

:

AB''

:

AE''

:

AC''

:

Zg'.

:

ABC ADF:

:

:

:

59.81169

11.

:

8.5 ==

:

:

15^

:

:

122;

:

5U81169

by

sq. ch.

sq. ch.

sq. ch.

AE= 12.247 ch.

AE^.

:.

A^.

.',AG=

9.798 ch.

:

:

:

:

15^

:

:

122

A&. Jp\

:

.

.-.

AD = 8.659 ch.

,-,AF

= 6.928

ch.

ABC, whose sides AB, BC, and AC among three persons, A, B, and C, AB,. so that A may have 3 a., B 4 a., and

Divide the triangular

field

are 22, 17, and 15 ch., respectively,

by

C

fences parallel to the base

the remainder.

CAB CDG CEF CAB

= V27 X 5 X 10 X 12 = 127.2792 sq. ch. = CAB - ABGD = 127.2792 - 30 = 97.2792 sq. = CAB - ABFE = 127.2792 - 70 = 57.2792 sq. CDG M^ CG^ :

:

:

127.2792

:

:

:

ch.

ch.

:

OT

97.2792

:

:

:

C&.

:

17^

:

:

152

.

C^.

:.

^2

cj)\

...

CF^.

.-.

CG = 14.862 CD = 13.113

ch. ch.

CAB:CEF::CB':CF^ :

127.2792

:

:

BC

fences

Tb" AD" ZC' AF\

19.9372

:

X

::

39.8744

:

6.5

= 19.9372 = 39.8744

of 59.81169

ABC AEG 59.81169

X

3.5

parts,

GZ'

57.2792

:

:

:

GF.

:

I72

:

152

:

:

CF= 11.404

Oil ..CE=

ch.

10.062 ch.

^-

183

TEACHERS EDITION.

Exercise V. 1.

notes

Find the :

difference of level of

back-sights, 5.2, 6.8,

and

4.0

;

two places from the following fore-sights, 8.1, 9.5, and 7.9.

8.1

+

5.2

4-6.8+4

9.5

+

7.9

=

field

25.5

=16 9.5

2.

Write the proper numbers

following table of field notes, and Station.

in the third

make

and

fifth

columns of the

a profile of the section.

SURVEYING.

184

Station.

+ S.

B

6.000

H.I.

-S.

H.S.

H.G.

Remarks.

Bench on rock

25 10.2

20,8

0.0

30

feet

stake 1

5.3

20.4

5.3

2

4.6

20.0

6.4

3

4.0

19.6

7.4

4

6.8

19.2

5.0

7.090

18.8

5.1

6

3.9

18.4

6.2

7

2.0

18.0

8.5

8

4.9

17.6

6.0

9

4.3

17.2

7.0

5

10 10.25

572

4.5

16.8

7.2

11.8

16.7

0.0

10

west of

1.

10.25

Date Due

BOSTON COLLEGE

3 9031 01550242