Assuming you are referring to degrees; 0.81915
Sine 3.3 degrees is about 0.057564. Sine 3.3 radians is about -0.157746. Sine 3.3 grads is about 0.051813.
sine(15 degrees) = 0.25882 (rounded)
One. Exactly one.
2
all of them
Sine 3.3 degrees is about 0.057564. Sine 3.3 radians is about -0.157746. Sine 3.3 grads is about 0.051813.
The sine of 180 degrees is 0. Remember, the sine value on a unit circle is the y-value. If you find f(pi) in the function f(x)=sin(x), you will get zero as an answer.
sine(15 degrees) = 0.25882 (rounded)
If you look at the definition of the sine function in a triangle, you'll discover that the maximum possible value of the sine function is ' 1 ' and the minimum possible value is ' -1 '. There's no angle that can have a sine greater than ' 1 ' or less than ' -1 '. So the absolute value of the sine of anything is always ' 1 ' or less.
The numerical value of -55 is?
sine of 30 degrees
One. Exactly one.
cos(35)sin(55)+sin(35)cos(55) If we rewrite this switching the first and second terms we get: sin(35)cos(55)+cos(35)sin(55) which is a more common form of the sin sum and difference formulas. Thus this is equal to sin(90) and sin(90)=1
The exact value is 0.5*sqrt(3)
2
all of them
Your question is insufficiently precise, but I'll try to answer anyway. "Sine squared theta" usually means "the value of the sine of theta, quantity squared". "Sine theta squared" usually means "the value of the sine of the quantity theta*theta". The two are not at all the same.