Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. 5.6 Law of Cosines.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. 5.6 Law of Cosines Goal: Apply the Law of Cosines.
Advertisements

Law of Cosines Digital Lesson. Copyright © by Houghton Mifflin Company, Inc. All rights reserved. 2 An oblique triangle is a triangle that has no right.
Laws of Sines and Cosines Sections 6.1 and 6.2. Objectives Apply the law of sines to determine the lengths of side and measures of angle of a triangle.
Chapter 6.2.
Mrs. Rivas International Studies Charter School. The Law of Cosines and its Derivation The Law of Cosines is used to solve triangles in which two sides.
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley Slide 5- 1 Homework, Page 484 Solve the triangle. 1.
TODAY IN ALGEBRA 2.0…  Learning Target : You will solve triangles that have NO RIGHT ANGLE using LAW OF COSINES.  Independent Practice.
Slide Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley.
7 Applications of Trigonometry and Vectors
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. CHAPTER 8: Applications of Trigonometry 8.1The Law of Sines 8.2The Law of Cosines 8.3Complex Numbers: Trigonometric.
The Law of Sines. Quick Review Quick Review Solutions.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. CHAPTER 6: The Trigonometric Functions 6.1The Trigonometric Functions of Acute Angles 6.2Applications of Right.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. 5.5 Law of Sines. Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide What you’ll learn about Deriving the Law of Sines Solving.
5.6 Law of Cosines. I. Law of Cosines In any triangle with opposite sides a, b, and c: The Law of Cosines is used to solve any triangle where you are.
6.2 LAW OF COSINES. 2 Use the Law of Cosines to solve oblique triangles (SSS or SAS). Use the Law of Cosines to model and solve real-life problems. Use.
AREA OF A TRIANGLE. Given two sides and an included angle:
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall.
Chapter 6 Additional Topics: Triangles and Vectors 6.1 Law of Sines 6.2 Law of Cosines 6.3 Areas of Triangles 6.4 Vectors 6.5 The Dot Product.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. 9.2 The Binomial Theorem.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. 5.6 Law of Cosines.
1 Law of Cosines Digital Lesson. 2 Law of Cosines.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley. Chapter 4 Applications of the Derivative.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. 6.4 Polar Coordinates.
Chapter 6 Additional Topics in Trigonometry Copyright © 2014, 2010, 2007 Pearson Education, Inc The Law of Cosines.
Chapter 6 – Trigonometric Functions: Right Triangle Approach Law of Cosines.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. 5.5 Law of Sines Goal: Solve triangles that have no solution, one solution, or two solutions.
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley Slide 5- 1 Homework, Page 468 Use a sum or difference identity to find an.
Math /7.2 – The Law of Sines 1. Q: We know how to solve right triangles using trig, but how can we use trig to solve any triangle? A: The Law of.
Chapter 8 Section 8.2 Law of Cosines. In any triangle (not necessarily a right triangle) the square of the length of one side of the triangle is equal.
1 Equations 7.3 The Law of Cosines 7.4 The Area of a Triangle Chapter 7.
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley Slide 5- 1.
Slide Applications of Trigonometry and Vectors.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. CHAPTER 8: Applications of Trigonometry 8.1The Law of Sines 8.2The Law of Cosines 8.3Complex Numbers: Trigonometric.
ITG Day 9: Volume. 1. What do the following letters stand for: B - h - r -
© 2010 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. CHAPTER 10 Geometry.
Section Law of Cosines. Law of Cosines: SSS or SAS Triangles Use the diagram to complete the following problems, given triangle ABC is acute.
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 6 Additional Topics in Trigonometry.
Quiz 13.5 Solve for the missing angle and sides of Triangle ABC where B = 25º, b = 15, C = 107º Triangle ABC where B = 25º, b = 15, C = 107º 1. A = ? 2.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. 4.7 Inverse Trigonometric Functions.
Law of Cosines. h a c A B C x D b - x b To derive the formula, fine the relationship between a, b, c, and A in this triangle. a 2 = (b – x) 2 + h 2 a.
Date: 6.2(b) Notes: Derive the Law of Cosines Lesson Objective: Derive and use the Law of Cosines to solve oblique triangles. CCSS: F-TF Extend the domain.
Law of Cosines Digital Lesson. Copyright © by Brooks/Cole, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 2 An oblique triangle is a triangle that has no right.
6.4 Law Of Sines. The law of sines is used to solve oblique triangles; triangles with no right angles. We will use capital letters to denote angles of.
CHAPTER 5 LESSON 4 The Law of Sines VOCABULARY  None.
Law of Cosines. SAS Area Formula: A b c Heron’s SSS Area Formula: b c a.
Chapter 4 Laws of Sines and Cosines; Vectors 4.2 The Law of Cosines 1
Copyright © 2017, 2013, 2009 Pearson Education, Inc.
Demana, Waits, Foley, Kennedy
Demana, Waits, Foley, Kennedy
5.6 Law of Cosines.
Copyright © 2014, 2010, 2007 Pearson Education, Inc.
Law of Cosines Advanced Math 8.2.
6.2 The Law of Cosines.
Copyright © 2014, 2010, 2007 Pearson Education, Inc.
1) Solve the triangle. Students,
Quadratic Equations, Inequalities, and Functions
Copyright © 2014, 2010, 2007 Pearson Education, Inc.
Honors Precalculus April 16, 2018 Mr. Agnew
2) State the LAW OF COSINES.
8.2-Law of the Cosines Law of the Cosines & Requirements
Law of Cosines Notes Over
Section 8.4 Area of a Triangle
Solve the oblique triangle with the following measurements:
Copyright © 2014, 2010, 2007 Pearson Education, Inc.
Section 8.3 The Law of Cosines
5.6 Law of Cosines.
5.5 Law of Sines.
Section 6.5 Law of Cosines Objectives:
Digital Lesson Law of Cosines.
Law of Cosines Ref page 417.
Presentation transcript:

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. 5.6 Law of Cosines

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide What you’ll learn about Deriving the Law of Cosines Solving Triangles (SAS, SSS) Triangle Area and Heron’s Formula Applications … and why The Law of Cosines is an important extension of the Pythagorean theorem, with many applications.

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Law of Cosines

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Example Solving a Triangle (SAS)

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Example Solving a Triangle (SAS)

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Example Solving a Triangle (SAS)

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Example Solving a Triangle (SSS)

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Example Solving a Triangle (SSS)

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Example Solving a Triangle (SSS)

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Example Solving a Triangle (SSS)

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Area of a Triangle

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Heron’s Formula

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Example Using Heron’s Formula Find the area of a triangle with sides 10, 12, 14.

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Example Using Heron’s Formula Find the area of a triangle with sides 10, 12, 14.

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Quick Review

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Quick Review

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Quick Review

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Chapter Test

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Chapter Test

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Chapter Test 9.A hot-air balloon is seen over Tucson, Arizona, simultaneously by two observers at points A and B that are 1.75 mi apart on level ground and in line with the balloon. The angles of elevation are as shown here. How high above ground is the balloon?

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Chapter Test 10.A wheel of cheese in the shape of a right circular cylinder is 18 cm in diameter and 5 cm thick. If a wedge of cheese with a central angle of 15 º is cut from the wheel, find the volume of the cheese wedge.

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Chapter Test Solutions

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Chapter Test Solutions

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Chapter Test Solutions 9. A hot-air balloon is seen over Tucson, Arizona, simultaneously by two observers at points A and B that are 1.75 mi apart on level ground and in line with the balloon. The angles of elevation are as shown here. How high above ground is the balloon? ≈ 0.6 mi

Copyright © 2011 Pearson, Inc. Slide Chapter Test Solutions 10.A wheel of cheese in the shape of a right circular cylinder is 18 cm in diameter and 5 cm thick. If a wedge of cheese with a central angle of 15 º is cut from the wheel, find the volume of the cheese wedge. 405π/24 ≈ 53.01