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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

Using the Relationship: Applications and Symmetry

Deck 2 of 2: Applications and Symmetry

Recap from Deck 1: and

In this deck: put that relationship to work.

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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

Learning Objectives for This Deck

  1. Apply to solve problems
  2. Use the relationship to find trig values without a calculator
  3. Understand how this relationship simplifies trigonometric work

Deck 1 recap in one line:

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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

One Known Value Gives You Many More

If you know , you immediately know:

  • — since
  • — and you can find similarly
  • Every complementary pair is linked

The strategy: check if angles are complementary. If yes — substitute.

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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

Application 1: Find a Value Without a Calculator

Given:

Find:

Step 1: Check: ✓ — they're complementary.

Step 2: Apply:

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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

Application 2: Simplify an Algebraic Expression

Simplify:

Apply the identity:

Let :

Simplify:

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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

Quick Check: Simplify This Expression

Simplify:

What does this equal?

a)
b)
c)
d)

Choose your answer before advancing.

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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

Answer: Treating 2θ as a Single Unit

Why: The identity applies with :

The "2θ" is treated as a single unit — the entire complement.

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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

Application 3: Solve a Trig Equation

Solve:

Step 1: Rewrite the right side using the identity:

Step 2: Now the equation is:

Step 3: Therefore

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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

Your Turn: Solve This Equation

Solve:

Steps to try:

  1. Rewrite as a sine using the identity
  2. Match the two sines
  3. State the value of

Work it out before advancing.

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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

Answer: θ Equals 58 Degrees, Verify It

Check: ✓ — they are complementary.

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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

Application 4: Evaluate an Expression

Evaluate:

Recognize: — complementary!

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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

Build the Habit: Check Complements First

Whenever you see sine and cosine together in a problem:

  1. Identify the angles involved
  2. Check: do the two angles sum to 90°?
  3. If yes: apply to simplify
  4. If no: look for another approach

This habit prevents the most common mistake: working harder than you need to.

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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

The Relationship Works for Any Acute Angle

Students sometimes think this only applies to "nice" angles like 30°, 45°, 60°.

It applies to every acute angle:

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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

Check-In: Apply What You Know

Given:

  1. What is ?
  2. Express using sine.

Think through both parts before advancing.

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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

Answers: Both Parts Confirmed Using the Identity

Part 1: — complementary. So:

Part 2: By the identity with :

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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

Zooming Out: Seeing the Bigger Symmetry

You've now used the relationship in four ways:

  • Finding values, simplifying expressions, solving equations, evaluating sums

Now let's see why these applications feel so natural — there's a deeper symmetry between sine and cosine that explains everything.

The relationship isn't algebraic convenience — it's geometric symmetry.

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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

The Symmetry Table: Values Match Up

Symmetry table showing sin(θ) and cos(90°−θ) values at 0°, 30°, 45°, 60°, 90° with matching values highlighted

  • As increases from 0° to 90°, increases: 0 → 1
  • As increases from 0° to 90°, decreases: 1 → 0
  • At :
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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

The Graph: A Perfect Reflection

Graph of sin and cos curves from 0° to 90° showing reflection symmetry about the vertical line at θ=45°

  • The sine and cosine curves reflect about the vertical line
  • is the algebraic statement of this reflection
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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

Cofunctions: Sine and Cosine Are Partners

The prefix "co-" in cosine means complement:

  • was originally called the complement's sine — the sine of the complementary angle
  • This is why : cosine is complement-sine

Other cofunction pairs (preview for Precalculus):

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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

Check-In: The Special Case at 45°

Predict: At what angle does ?

Use the identity:

If , then:

How does the symmetry table confirm this?

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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

Watch Out: Both Directions Are Valid

Misconception: Confusing which direction to apply the relationship.

Both are true — and both are useful:

Choose the form that simplifies your problem:

  • Converting sine → use the second identity
  • Converting cosine → use the first identity
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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

Key Takeaways: What You Now Know

✓ Check complementarity first — angles summing to 90° unlock the identity

✓ Four application types: find values, simplify expressions, solve equations, evaluate sums

✓ The identity works for any acute angle — not just 30°, 45°, 60°

✓ Sine and cosine are mirror images on , crossing at

⚠️ Watch out: Both directions are valid — match the form to your goal

⚠️ Watch out:

⚠️ Watch out: only at — not in general

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HSG.SRT.C.7 · Sine and Cosine of Complementary Angles

What You Will Study Next

Immediately ahead — HSG.SRT.C.8:

The complementary relationship will help you choose which trig ratio to use when solving right triangles — fewer equations, cleaner solutions.

Later — Precalculus:

  • Cofunction identities: ,
  • Graphing trig functions: — the same relationship as a phase shift
  • Unit circle: the complementary relationship extends to all angles

The identity you proved today is the foundation for all of it.

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