72.7k views
4 votes
Hello i really need help i am supposed to be finding the missing side

Hello i really need help i am supposed to be finding the missing side-example-1
User Jonathan R
by
7.5k points

1 Answer

1 vote

We have a right triangle, and we have one angle, the measure of the hypotenuse, we have that the side, x, is adjacent to the angle that measures 21°:

Since we have a right triangle (one of its internal angles equals 90 degrees), we can use the trigonometric ratios. Since we have that the adjacent side to 21 is x and the value for the hypotenuse is 10, then we can use the cosine ratio as follows:


cos(\theta)=\frac{\text{ Adjacent side}}{\text{ Hypotenuse}}

Therefore, we have:


cos(21^(\circ))=(x)/(10)

Now, we need to multiply both sides of the equation by 10 as follows:


\begin{gathered} 10*cos(21^(\circ))=10((x)/(10))=x \\ \\ x=10*cos(21^(\circ)) \\ \\ x=9.33580426497 \end{gathered}

Therefore, in summary, if we round our result to the nearest tenth, we have that the value for x = 9.3.

Hello i really need help i am supposed to be finding the missing side-example-1
User Alison
by
7.8k points

No related questions found

Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.

9.4m questions

12.2m answers

Categories