Law of Sines... How? When? (NancyPi)

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If you need to "solve the triangle" in a trigonometry problem, it just means to find all the missing angles and sides of the triangle.

WHAT is the LAW of SINES? Say that you're given an oblique triangle, meaning one that is not a right angle triangle, and you need to solve it. If you know two angles and at least one of the sides, you can solve with the Law of Sines trigonometry formula. The Law of Sines says that the sine of one angle over the side opposite that angle, equals the sine of the next angle over its opposite side, which equals sine of the last angle over its opposite length. These three ratios equal each other, and you can use these proportions to solve for unknowns.

Say that you're given that angle B is 34 degrees, angle C is 110 degrees, and side b is 14. We know two angles and one side. What's missing, or what we're looking for, is side a, side c, and the measure of angle A. That missing third angle, angle A, we can find very quickly without using any special new law or trig identity, since the sum of the degrees in a triangle is always 180 degrees. Subtracting the two known angles (34 and 110 degrees) from the total 180 degrees gives that the measure of angle A is 36 degrees.

HOW to use the Law of Sines: to find the missing two side lengths, we do need the Law of Sines theorem. First write all the ratios from the Law of Sines: the sine of each angle, over the length opposite. We write the sine of 36 degrees over the opposite side, side a. This equals sine of the next angle, 34 degrees, over its opposite side 14. And finally, that equals sine of the last angle, 110 degrees, over the opposite length, the unknown c.

If we look at just the leftmost two ratios, we see that we can use that equation to solve for a. So we separate that part out to solve: sin(36)/a = sin(34)/14. An easy way to solve a proportion like this is to cross-multiply. This gives us 14sin(36) = a*sin(34). Now it's more clear how to solve for side a, by just dividing out sin(34) from both sides. So we get that a is equal to 14*sin(36)/sin(34). To get a number value that's practical as the length of a triangle side, you can use your calculator to get a decimal number. CAUTION: since we were given angles in degrees, make sure your calculator is in degree mode, not radian mode, so that you don't get the wrong answer. The side length a is then approximately 14.72.

Now there's just one more unknown to find, the side c. To find the remaining missing side of a triangle, you can use a different pair of ratios to solve, the equation with the rightmost two ratios: sin(34)/14 = sin(110)/c. In general, to solve for one of the unknowns, use the ratio that has what you want to find in it, as the only unknown, and set it equal to a ratio where you know everything already, and you will get the answer. We cross-multiply to get c*sin(34) = 14sin(110). When we get c alone and use a calculator, we find that side length c is approx. 23.53. Now we've completely solved the triangle for all the missing sides and angles.

How do you know WHEN to use the LAW of SINES? If you're given two angles and a side (AAS or ASA cases), or two sides and an angle opposite one of those sides (SSA), you can use the Law of Sines property. If you have two angles and one side (AAS/ASA), you can use the Law of Sines just as we did to find the missing sides. WARNING: for the SSA case, when you have two sides and an angle that's opposite one of them, you can also use the Law of Sines to solve, but instead of having one solution, there may be no solution or two solutions. The SSA case is also called the "ambiguous case".

Editor: Miriam Nielsen of zentouro @zentouro
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Exactly a year today since her last post🥺. Where are you

markaldrinabegonia
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The amount of help your videos have been is indescribable, as someone who's education was muddled from constantly moving around (military family) and having learning problems (Autism & ADHD) everything I've seen from you has not only helped bridge gaps in my knowledge, but has also helped me better understand what is even going on with half the concepts I'm currently doing. You turned me round from freezing in fear and not knowing what to do into someone who is actually happy to do maths.

Very happy to see you are back at it, please don't stop. You're beyond valuable, thank you!

GECKman
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Everyone in the comment says how gorgeous she is or something else but nancy wants to get the appreciation of her teaching style how she makes anything easy and interesting

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I am a retired mechanical engineer, 65 years old, I love math, but after being out of school for 43 years, I forgot a lot...but this channel is fantastic. I find myself looking at these videos, pulling out my Hewlett Packard HP21 calculator and following along with Nancy. Thanks so much

bronc
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YOURE BACK!! this just made my entire week

alisonthorpe
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such a soothing, sleep-inducing voice. Math teachers usually sleep-induce, but not in this wonderful, feel good way. i love it.

jdbhatts
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Im not even taking math anymore but your video popped up and I had to watch, you’re the best!!

cindycharbonneau
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You are back! I was worried for a while that you may never post such amazing math videos. I admire your knowledge and the way you explain math. Keep up the good work.

asfariqbal
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I’m not even in school anymore but couldn’t resist watching a new Nancy video!

TheJohnGodino
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i love how she talks at the right speed, i can really understand her well.

allyssatandoc
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I Love you Nancy! Thank you for being an INCREDIBLE math teacher. I've been watching your video's for years to refresh math concepts

anthonycortez
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hey, im sure you hear this all the time but you've helped me so much in maths. your videos are the most useful ones ive found on youtube so far. you really explain a lot of things that would make solving questions so much easier but the teachers just dont mention. i cant believe it but ive actually started to enjoy maths!

anyways, i have exams soon so ive been using your channel a lot, and i noticed you havent uploaded in a while. i hope you're okay.

thanks again for sharing your knowledge with the world and helping struggling student like me 😅

sushmaborade
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I love the humor you've been letting into these new videos! You've really kicked the editing up a notch too. You haven't aged a day either, fyi!

brandongonzalez
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Hey Nancy, hope everything's okay! Stay safe and appreciate your videos really helped with a lot!

nijahh.
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You're back! We missed you so much!!
Stay safe and keep it up 😁💙

Aldrin_
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Nancy, youre just amazing. No other words can describe the feeling of getting rid of maths homework thanks to you.

db
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Hey,
Why are you not posting new videos??
Please post. !!!
Your math explanation is far better than any other you tube teacher..

ashmitsharma
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your videos are genuinely the only reason i’m passing, you explain everything so thoroughly

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Thank you Nancy, we are actually doing this THIS WEEK at Uni. Great to see you again and love the humour, hope for more soon in COVID times :D love from Australia

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I wanted to thank you for your videos. Your videos on integration got me an A in physical chemistry! I loved the class, mostly because the math made sense because of your lessons. Thank you!

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