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Derivation of Law of Sines and CosinesDate: 11/02/97 at 14:58:12 From: Yuan Tao Subject: Derivation of law of Sines and Cosines How do you derive the law of sines and the law of cosines?
Date: 11/03/97 at 14:31:23
From: Doctor Pete
Subject: Re: Derivation of law of Sines and Cosines
Generally, there are several ways to prove the Law of Sines and the
Law of Cosines, but I will provide one of each here: Let ABC be a
triangle with angles A, B, C and sides a, b, c, such that angle A
subtends side a, etc.
Theorem (Law of Sines). Sin[A]/a = Sin[B]/b = Sin[C]/c.
Proof. Draw the perpendicular (altitude) from B to side b, and suppose
this has length h. Then note that Sin[C] = h/a, or h = a Sin[C].
Similarly, Sin[A] = h/c, or h = c Sin[A].
Therefore, a Sin[C] = c Sin[A] or Sin[A]/a = Sin[C]/c, since neither a
nor c has length 0. Clearly, if we were to draw another altitude h',
say, from A to a, we would find by a similar argument that
Sin[B]/B = Sin[C]/c, and hence the result follows.
Theorem (Law of Cosines). c^2 = a^2 + b^2 - 2ab Cos[C].
Proof. Place triangle ABC on a Cartesian coordinate system such that
angle C is at the origin and length a lies on the x-axis. Then length
b is the other ray from the origin. We can easily identify the
coordinates of two of the vertices: Vertex C lies at (0,0), and
vertex B lies at (a,0). We must identify vertex A, which lies
somewhere in quadrant I or II (since angle C < 180 degrees). But the
x-coordinate of A is b Cos[C], as can be seen by drawing the
perpendicular from A to the x-axis. Similarly, the y-coordinate
is b Sin[C]. Hence A lies at (b Cos[C], b Sin[C]). Therefore, the
length of c is given by the distance between A and B, which is by the
distance formula
c = Sqrt[(a - b Cos[C])^2 + (b Sin[C])^2]
or upon squaring both sides,
c^2 = (a - b Cos[C])^2 + (b Sin[C])^2
= a^2 - 2ab Cos[C] + b^2 Cos[C]^2 + b^2 Sin[C]^2
= a^2 + b^2 (Cos[C]^2 + Sin[C]^2) - 2ab Cos[C].
But Cos[C]^2 + Sin[C]^2 = 1 for any angle C, and therefore
c^2 = a^2 + b^2 - 2ab Cos[C].
I hope that was understandable. To really get a feel for the proofs,
draw out the diagrams. Clearly, the Law of Cosines is a more difficult
proof, but it is really a generalization of the Pythagorean Theorem,
since in the right-angle case (C = 90), Cos[C] = 0 and we obtain
c^2 = a^2 + b^2. This is why we often see the Law of Cosines written
as c^2 = ... instead of the equally valid form
a^2 = b^2 + c^2 - 2bc Cos[A].
Another little tidbit of interest is that the proof of the Law of
Sines can be taken in a slightly different direction to show that the
area of a triangle is (ab Sin[C])/2 = (bc Sin[A])/2 = (ac Sin[B])/2.
There's also a Law of Tangents, but I don't quite remember the
formula. It's not commonly used, and it really amounts to just a bunch
of trigonometric manipulation, so it's not that exciting.
-Doctor Pete, The Math Forum
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