Help with a sin degree problem please.

4boysmeme

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Dec 6, 2011
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Use the figure to find sin x degree.

IMG3.jpgI don't even know how where to start on this problem. Please solve this for me. We will have a test on this next week and I need step by step instructions. I am totally lost. Thank you.
 
You already started! Excellent drawing.

Ponder the three equal half-diagonals. Think about the upper-right quadrant. It's a right triangle with equal legs and an hypotenuse of 8.

That's enough to be almost done. Shout out the length of the two legs!! Come on, just let it out.
 
That is where I get lost. I know that the two sides are the same length and that a squared + b squared = 8 squared, but I can't come up with the length of each of the other two sides. I think my brain is just dead from working on this for so long...........
 
Ok after much deliberation I have come up with x to be approximately 34.44990199. Can you tell me if this is correct, please.
 
I have come up with x to be approximately 34.44990199.

That is correct; however, keep in mind that in your problem statement,

Use the figure to find sin x degree.

you were to find sin x, not x itself.
 
Now I am confused. Isn't that what I found?

I don't think so.

You have a right triangle.

The hypotenuse of that right triangle has length 10. One acute angle has degree measure x. The leg OPPOSITE that angle has length 4 sqrt(2).

The right triangle definition of sin x where x is an acute angle in a right triangle is:

sin x = (opposite leg) / (hypotenuse)


Substitute 4 sqrt(2) for the opposite leg, and 10 for the hypotenuse. Simplify that ratio if possible.

That will be "sin x"
 
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