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On a unit circle, what is tan for coordinates (-√2/2, √2/2)?

a.) -1
b.) -√2/2
c.) 1
d.) √2/2
e.)√2​

User Juss
by
7.9k points

2 Answers

4 votes

Answer:

your correct answer cuz is

A

Explanation:

User RafalS
by
8.5k points
4 votes

Answer:

A

Explanation:

Remember that tangent is the ratio of sine over cosine.


\tan(\theta)=(\sin(\theta))/(\cos(\theta))

In the unit circle:

  • Sine refers to the y-coordinate.
  • Cosine refers to the x-coordinate.

Our x-coordinate is -√2/2 and our y-coordinate is √2/2.

So, substitute -√2/2 for cosine and √2/2 for sine. This yields:


\tan(\theta)=(\sqrt2/2)/(-\sqrt2/2)

Since the numerator and the denominator are the same save for a negative, we can cancel them:


\tan(\theta)=-1

So, our answer is A.

User Zeehad
by
8.7k points

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