How do you find the remaining side of a 30^circ-60^circ-90^circ30∘−60∘−90∘ triangle if the side opposite 60^circ60∘ is 6?
2 Answers
Use Trigonometric identities.
Explanation:
Let us assume the side next to
Then use the Pythagorean theorem.
We know:
Then:
The side lengths are:
Explanation:
The sides of a
In math:
"side opposite 60°"/"side opposite 30°"=sqrt3/1=sqrt3
"side opposite 90°"/"side opposite 30°"=2/1=2
We are given the side opposite 60° to be length 6. So, given that the ratio of "the 60° side"-to-"the 30° side" is
"side opp. 60°"/"side opp. 30°"=sqrt3
6/"side opp. 30°"=sqrt3
" "6/sqrt3" "="side opp. 30°"
" "(6sqrt3)/3" "="side opp. 30°"
" "2sqrt3" "="side opp. 30°"
And, since "the 90° side" is 2 times as long as "the 30° side", we have
"side opp. 90°" = 2xx "side opp. 30°"
"side opp. 90°" = 2xx 2sqrt 3
"side opp. 90°" = 4sqrt 3 .