Solving Oblique Triangles: Law of Sines and Law of Cosines, Study notes of Law

An introduction to solving oblique triangles using the Law of Sines and Law of Cosines. It explains when to use each formula based on the given information and provides examples for practice. Students of geometry and trigonometry will find this document useful for understanding how to solve triangles that are not right triangles.

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Section 7.3 - The Law of Sines and the Law of Cosines
Sometimes you will need to solve a triangle that is not a right triangle. This
type of triangle is called an oblique triangle. To solve an oblique triangle
you will not be able to use right triangle trigonometry. Instead, you will use
the Law of Sines and/or the Law of Cosines.
You will typically be given three parts of the triangle and you will be asked
to find the other three. The approach you will take to the problem will
depend on the information that is given.
If you are given SSS (the lengths of all three sides) or SAS (the lengths of
two sides and the measure of the included angle), you will use the Law of
Cosines to solve the triangle.
If you are given SAA (the measures of two angles and one side) or SSA (the
measures of two sides and the measure of an angle that is not the included
angle), you will use the Law of Sines to solve the triangle.
Recall from your geometry course that SSA does not necessarily determine a
triangle. We will need to take special care when this is the given
information.
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Section 7.3 - The Law of Sines and the Law of Cosines

Sometimes you will need to solve a triangle that is not a right triangle. This type of triangle is called an oblique triangle. To solve an oblique triangle you will not be able to use right triangle trigonometry. Instead, you will use the Law of Sines and/or the Law of Cosines.

You will typically be given three parts of the triangle and you will be asked to find the other three. The approach you will take to the problem will depend on the information that is given.

If you are given SSS (the lengths of all three sides) or SAS (the lengths of two sides and the measure of the included angle), you will use the Law of Cosines to solve the triangle.

If you are given SAA (the measures of two angles and one side) or SSA (the measures of two sides and the measure of an angle that is not the included angle), you will use the Law of Sines to solve the triangle.

Recall from your geometry course that SSA does not necessarily determine a triangle. We will need to take special care when this is the given information.

Please read this!

Here are some facts about solving triangles that may be helpful in this section:

If you are given SSS, SAS or SAA, the information determines a unique triangle.

If you are given SSA, the information given may determine 0, 1 or 2 triangles. This is called the “ambiguous case” of the law of sines. If this is the information you are given, you will have some additional work to do.

Since you will have three pieces of information to find when solving a triangle, it is possible for you to use both the Law of Sines and the Law of Cosines in the same problem.

When drawing a triangle, the measure of the largest angle is opposite the longest side; the measure of the middle-sized angle is opposite the middle- sized side; and the measure of the smallest angle is opposite the shortest side.

Suppose a , b and c are suggested to be the lengths of the three sides of a triangle. Suppose that c is the biggest of the three measures. In order for a, b and c to form a triangle, this inequality must be true: a + b > c. So, the sum of the two smaller sides must be greater than the third side.

An obtuse triangle is a triangle which has one angle that is greater than 90°. An acute triangle is a triangle in which all three angles measure less than 90°. If you are given the lengths of the three sides of a triangle, where c > a and c > b , you can determine if the triangle is obtuse or acute using the following:

If a^2  b^2  c^2 , the triangle is an acute triangle. If a^2^  b^2  c^2 ,the triangle is an obtuse triangle.

Your first task will be to analyze the given information to determine which formula to use. You should sketch the triangle and label it with the given information to help you see what you need to find. If you have a choice, it is usually best to find the largest angle first.

Example 1: In  ABC ,AC = 6, AB = 10, and mA  600. Find the length

of the side BC.

Example 2: In  ABC ,BC = 2, AB = 5, and AC= 39. Find the measure

of the angle B.

Example 4: An isosceles triangle has a vertex angle of 150 0. If the equal sides are 10 units each, find the length of the base.

Some problem might require to use a calculator. Your exam questions will not require the use of a calculator.

Example 5: In  ABC ,  B  50  , a = 10 and c = 12. Find the length of AC.

Round your answer to the nearest tenth.

THE LAW OF SINES

Here’s the Law of Sines. In any triangle ABC,

sin sin sin

c

C

b

B

a

A

This law is USED FOR SAA, SSA cases! SAA: One side and two angles are given

SSA: Two sides and an angle opposite to one of those sides are given

b a

c

A

C

B

Example 6: Find x.

A B

C

Example 8: In the triangle below, AB=9, BC=12. Find the value of x. (You may use inverse trig notation to express your answer.)

POPPER for Section 7.

Question#2: In triangle ABC, mA  30 ,^0 mB  45 ,^0 a  12. Find the

length of AC=b.

a) 12 3 b) 6 2 c) 6 3 d) 12 2 e) 12 6 f) None of these

Example 10: In triangle ABC, the measure of angle A is 60^0 , the length of

BC is 8 3 and the length of AC is 8 2. Find all possible measures for angle B.

Example 11: In  ABC ,  B  50  , a = 6 and b = 9. Find the length of AB.

Round your answer to the nearest tenth.

Example 12: In  ABC m ,  A  110 ,^0 a  5, b  7. How many possible

triangles are there?