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If tan 3A = cot (A – 30°), where 3A is an acute angle, find the value of A

Trigonometry is a discipline of mathematics that studies the relationships between the lengths of the sides and angles of a right-angled triangle. Trigonometric functions, also known as goniometric functions, angle functions, or circular functions, are functions that establish the relationship between an angle to the ratio of two of the sides of a right-angled triangle. The six main trigonometric functions are sine, cosine, tangent, cotangent, secant, or cosecant.

Angles defined by the ratios of trigonometric functions are known as trigonometry angles. Trigonometric angles represent trigonometric functions. The value of the angle can be anywhere between 0-360°.



As given in the above figure in a right-angled triangle:



Trigonometric Functions

Trigonometry has 6 basic trigonometric functions, they are sine, cosine, tangent, cosecant, secant, and cotangent. Now let’s look into the trigonometric functions. The six trigonometric functions are as follows,

According to the above image, Trigonometric Ratios are

Sin θ = Perpendicular / Hypotenuse = AB/AC

Cosine θ = Base / Hypotenuse = BC / AC

Tangent θ = Perpendicular / Base = AB / BC

Cosecant θ = Hypotenuse / Perpendicular = AC/AB

Secant θ = Hypotenuse / Base = AC/BC

Cotangent θ = Base / Perpendicular = BC/AB

Reciprocal Identities

Sin θ = 1/ Cosec θ                    OR        Cosec θ = 1/ Sin θ

Cos θ = 1/ Sec θ                       OR        Sec θ = 1 / Cos θ

Cot θ = 1 / Tan θ                     OR         Tan θ = 1 / Cot θ

Cot θ = Cos θ / Sin θ               OR         Tan θ = Sin θ / Cos θ

Tan θ.Cot θ = 1

Values of Trigonometric Ratios

  30° 45° 60° 90°
Sin θ  0 1/2              1√2            √3/2             1
Cos θ 1 √3/2 1/√2 1/2 0
Tan θ 0 1/√3 1 √3 Not Defined
Sec θ Not Defined 2 √2 2/√3 1
Cosec θ 1 2/√3 √2 2 Not Defined
Cot θ Not Defined √3 1 1/√3 0

Trigonometric Identities of Complementary and Supplementary Angles

Identities of Complementary angles are

sin (90° – θ) = cos θ

cos (90° – θ) = sin θ

tan (90° – θ) = cot θ

cot (90° – θ) = tan θ

sec (90° – θ) = cosec θ

cosec (90° – θ) = sec θ

Identities of supplementary angles

sin (180° – θ) = sin θ

cos (180° – θ) = – cos θ

tan (180° – θ) = – tan θ

cot  (180° – θ) = – cot θ

sec (180° – θ) = – sec θ

cosec (180° – θ) = – cosec θ

Quadrants of trigonometry

Quadrants

If tan 3A = cot (A – 30°), where 3A is an acute angle, find the value of A.

Solution:

Here we have 

tan 3A = cot (A – 30°)

cot (90 – 3A) = cot (A – 30°)                   { tan (90° – θ) = cot θ }

90 – 3A = A – 30°

90 + 30  =  A + 3A

120 = 4A

A = 30                        

So, the value of A is 30°

Similar Questions

Question 1: If sin 2A = cos (A – 30°), where 2A is an acute angle, find the value of A?

Solution:           

Here we have 

sin 2A = cos (A – 30°) 

cos (90 – 2A) = cos (A – 30°)                                  { cos (90° – θ) = sin θ }

90 – 2A = A – 30°

90+30 = A + 2A

120 = 3A

Therefore A = 40°

Question 2: If sec 3A = cosec (3A – 30°), where 3A is an acute angle, find the value of A?         

Solution:

Here we have 

sec 3A = cosec (3A – 30°)

cosec (90 – 3A) = cosec (3A – 30°)                             { cosec (90° – θ) = sec θ }

90 – 3A = 3A – 30

90 + 30 = 3A +3A

120 = 6A

A = 20

So the value of A is 20°


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