Try calculating the sine functions on a scientific calculator, then do the division. And make sure the calculator is set to the correct angular measurement (radians, or degrees, whatever you want to calculate).
You are referring to a special case of shape its called a line
The sine of 52.5 degrees equals 0.79335334029124. Hope I helped!
It is 1.
Sine of an angle (in a right triangle) is the side opposite of the angle divided by the hypotenuse.
No, it does not.
You are referring to a special case of shape its called a line
the sine of a 30 degree angle is 0.5
The sine of 52.5 degrees equals 0.79335334029124. Hope I helped!
Sine they had a war
It is 1.
We need to use a little trigonometry to answere this. The sine of an angle in a right angled triangle is given by sine = opposite divided by hyponenuse that is the length of the side opposite the given angle divided by the length of the hypotenuse (or longest side). From that we can obtain that the length of the hypotenuse = opposite divided by sine. The sine is found by using a set of trigonometric tables or a scientific calculator (the majority of computers have a scientific calculator). The sine of 64 degrees is 0.89879, therefore the length of the wire (the hypotenuse) is 6.3 divided by 0.89879 which equals 7.009 metres.
The sine theta of an angle (in a right triangle) is the side opposite of the angle divided by the hypotenuse.
Sine of an angle (in a right triangle) is the side opposite of the angle divided by the hypotenuse.
opposite/hypotenuse
No, it does not.
For finding the angles in a right angled triangle the ratios are: sine = opposite divided by the hypotenuse cosine = adjacent divided by the hypotenuse tangent = opposite divided by the adjacent
Sine of the angle to its cosine.