Sine rule: Difference between revisions

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imported>Paul Wormer
imported>Paul Wormer
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[[Image:Proof sine rule2.png|right|thumb|200px|Fig. 3]]
[[Image:Proof sine rule2.png|right|thumb|200px|Fig. 3]]


==External link==
[http://madmath.madslideruling.com/precalculus/sinerule.html Life lecture]


===Proof of sine rule===
===Proof of sine rule===
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</math>
</math>
where ''d'' is the diameter of the circle. From this result the sine rule follows.
where ''d'' is the diameter of the circle. From this result the sine rule follows.
==External link==
[http://madmath.madslideruling.com/precalculus/sinerule.html Life lecture on Sine Law]

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Fig. 1. Sine rule: sinα:sinβ:sinγ=a:b:c

In trigonometry, the sine rule states that the ratio of the sines of the angles of a triangle is equal to the ratio of the lengths of the opposite sides, see Fig.1. Equivalently,

Proof

The easiest proof is purely geometric.

Lemma

Fig. 2. The angles α and β share the chord a. The center of the circle is at C and its diameter is d.

In Fig. 2 the angle β satisfies,

Indeed, in Fig. 2 we see two angles, α and β, that share a segment of the circle (have the chord a in common). By a well-known theorem of plane geometry it follows that the angles are equal. The angle α, having the diameter of the circle d as one of its sides, has as opposite angle a right angle. Hence sin(α) = a/d, the length of chord a divided by the diameter d. It follows that the angle β, with a corner on the circumference of the same circle as α, but other than that arbitrary, has the same sine as α.

Fig. 3


Proof of sine rule

From the lemma follows that the angles in Fig. 3 are

where d is the diameter of the circle. From this result the sine rule follows.

External link

Life lecture on Sine Law