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Find sin theta if cot theta =-4 and cos theta < 0

User Frapeti
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Imagine the unit circle. The cot(theta) is a line from (0,1) to (-4,1). Imagine it is part of a triangle with the origin (draw it!).

Then the hypotenuse length is √(1+4²) = √17.

The sine rule says that sin(90)/√17 must equal sin(theta)/4, and sin(90)=1, so


sin(\theta) = \frac4{√(17)}
User Leanette
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8.1k points
4 votes

Answer:

sin (Q) = 1 / sqrt(17)

Explanation:

Given:

cot (Q) = -4

Find:

- find sin theta if cos theta < 0

Solution:

- We will construct a right angle triangle first, mark one of the angle as Q.

- We know from trigonometric relations that:

cot ( Q ) = 1 / tan (Q)

- Hence, according to tan (Q) your opposite side is -4 and base is 1. However, since cot (Q) is a reciprocal of that we will mark -4 as base and +1 as opposite.

- Now to compute sin(Q), we will have to find the hypotenuse first:

H^2 = P^2 + B^2

H^2 = (-4)^2 + (1)^2

- we get, H^2 = 17

H = sqrt (17)

- so from hypotenuse we can determine sin (Q) as follows:

sin(Q) = P / H

sin (Q) = 1 / sqrt(17)

- since, cos (Q) < 0, then sin (Q) must be > 0.

User Onyi
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