Worked: Right-Angle Forces (Setup)
Given: F1 = 40 N east, F2 = 60 N north. Angle between forces: 90°.
Interior angle = 180° − 90° = 90° → the force triangle has a right angle.
When the interior angle is 90°, the Law of Cosines reduces to the Pythagorean Theorem.
Right-Angle Forces: Solution
- Direction:
north of east - R is larger than either force alone — and smaller than 40 + 60 = 100 N ✓
Quick Check
Two forces are 60° apart (measured tail-to-tail).
What is the interior angle of the force triangle, and why is it not 60°?
Think before advancing...
Non-Right Forces: Law of Cosines
When forces are not 90° apart, the triangle is SAS:
- Two sides = force magnitudes (
, ) - Included angle = interior angle =
Use the Law of Cosines for the resultant magnitude:
Worked: F1 = 50 N, F2 = 80 N at 60° (Setup)
Given: F1 = 50 N, F2 = 80 N, angle between them = 60°.
Interior angle = 180° − 60° = 120°
Law of Cosines (SAS — two magnitudes + included interior angle):
Forces at 60°: Solution
Direction (Law of Sines):
Resultant: 113.6 N at 37.6° from F1 toward F2 — always label the units.
Your Turn: Force Problem
Given: F1 = 30 N, F2 = 45 N, angle between them = 80°.
- Compute the interior angle of the force triangle
- Identify the case (SAS) and write the Law of Cosines for
- Write the full equation — do not solve yet
Try before advancing...
Quick Check
In the force problem above (F1 = 30 N, F2 = 45 N, angle 80°):
The interior angle is 100°. Is
Think before advancing...
Stepping Up the Challenge
Force problems involve one clear triangle with a known case.
Two harder situations require extra care:
- SSA (ambiguous case): may have 0, 1, or 2 valid triangles
- Multi-step problems: results from one triangle feed the next
Both need strategy before calculation.
The Ambiguous Case: SSA
SSA — two sides and a non-included angle — may produce:
- 0 solutions — side
is too short to reach the base line - 1 solution — exactly one valid triangle (or a right triangle)
- 2 solutions — two distinct triangles both satisfy the given data
Always check before solving — the next slide shows the decision method.
SSA Decision Flowchart
Compute
Worked: SSA Surveyor Example
Given:
Check:
Since
Quick Check
An SSA problem:
How many solutions exist? Show the comparison.
Compute
Multi-Step Problems: The Framework
Complex problems contain multiple triangles. Solve in order:
- Draw — one complete diagram before any equations
- Label — mark all knowns and unknowns
- Plan — identify which triangle you can solve first
- Solve — use each result in the next triangle
- Verify — does the answer make physical sense?
Worked: Two-Observer Balloon (Setup)
Setup: A and B are 100 m apart on level ground. The balloon is directly above a point between them.
- From A: angle of elevation = 60°
- From B: angle of elevation = 45°
Let
Balloon: Two Equations, Two Unknowns
From A (angle of elevation 60°):
From B (angle of elevation 45°):
Balloon: Solving for Height
Substitute
Your Turn: Similar Setup
From point A, the angle of elevation to a rooftop is 10°. From point B, 50 m closer, the angle is 15°. The building is 25 m tall.
Task: Draw the diagram. Identify the two right triangles. Label all unknowns.
Do not calculate yet — just set up the structure.
Quick Check
If
- A:
- B:
Think before advancing...
Practice: Ranger Stations
Two stations, A and B, are 20 km apart. A fire is spotted:
- From A at bearing 070°
- From B at bearing 340°
Find the distance from each station to the fire.
Hint: Convert bearings to interior angles of triangle ABF, then apply Law of Sines (AAS).
Key Takeaways
✓ Force resultant: interior angle = 180° − α → Law of Cosines (SAS)
✓ SSA: compute
✓ Multi-step: draw → plan → solve → verify in order
✓ Check physical reasonableness — 63 m balloon? Plausible.
SAS → Law of Cosines, not Law of Sines
SSA → run the
You Can Solve Any Triangle Problem
| Given | Case | Law |
|---|---|---|
| 2 angles + 1 side | AAS / ASA | Law of Sines |
| 2 sides + included angle | SAS | Law of Cosines |
| 3 sides | SSS | Law of Cosines |
| 2 sides + non-included | SSA | Law of Sines (check |
Apply to any context — land, sea, forces, engineering.