The Surveying Problem
A surveyor measures two boundary lengths and the angle between them. Can you find the area without measuring the height?
The Base-Height Formula Has a Gap
The standard formula works — but only when height is known:
- What surveyors measure: two boundary lengths + angle between them
- What they don't measure: the perpendicular height
- The goal: express
in terms of a side and an angle
If we can write
Setting Up the Derivation
- Angles
, , are opposite their respective sides - We choose side
(which is ) as the base - We need the altitude — the height from vertex
perpendicular to
Case 1: the triangle is acute (all angles less than 90°)
Case 1: Acute Triangle — Drawing the Altitude
Step 1: Draw altitude
Case 1: Acute Triangle — Applying Sine
In the right triangle at
Case 1: Acute Triangle — The Formula
From the previous slide:
Substitute into
This is the formula. The entire derivation fits in three lines.
Quick Check: What Did We Derive?
What expression for the height
- (a)
- (b)
- (c)
- (d)
Choose before advancing.
Answer: Height Equals Side Times Sine
Correct answer: (b)
Why: In the right triangle at vertex
- Hypotenuse =
(side ) - Opposite leg =
(the altitude)
Case 2: Right Triangle (A Quick Verification)
What if angle
- Sides
and serve directly as base and height - This matches the formula you already knew for right triangles
- The formula passes the sanity check
Case 3: Obtuse Triangle — The Setup
What if angle
- The altitude from
now falls outside the triangle - The foot of the altitude is on the extension of
beyond
Case 3: Obtuse Triangle — Sine of a Supplement
In the obtuse case, the relevant angle at
Therefore:
The height expression is identical — the supplement identity saves us.
Case 3: Obtuse Triangle — Same Formula
From the previous slide:
Substitute into
A = ½ab sin(C) holds for all three triangle types.
Quick Check: Why Does the Obtuse Case Work?
For an obtuse triangle, the altitude falls outside — yet the formula still holds.
In one sentence: why does
- (a) Because sin(C) is always positive, the formula can't fail
- (b) Because
, so still holds - (c) Because obtuse triangles have larger altitudes, which compensate
- (d) The formula does not actually work for obtuse triangles
Choose before advancing.
Why Supplementary Angles Have Equal Sines
This identity is the hinge of the obtuse case. Here's why it holds:
- By the supplementary angle identity from the unit circle
- Or: in a right triangle,
for supplementary pairs - Example:
Watch out: This does NOT hold for cosine —
Three Equivalent Forms of the Formula
On triangle
Rule: Use the form that matches your given information.
The angle must always be the included angle — between the two sides used.
Numerical Example: Using the Formula
Triangle with
Step 1: Identify the form — sides
Step 2:
Your Turn: Apply the Formula
Triangle with
Step 1: Write the formula for this case
Step 2: Substitute the values
Step 3: Evaluate — leave your answer to 2 decimal places
Set up and calculate before advancing.
Answer: Worked-Out Area for Practice Problem
Check:
Key Takeaways: Deck 1
✓
✓ The derivation works for all triangle types: acute, right, and obtuse
✓ For obtuse triangles,
The angle must be included — between the two sides you use
Don't drop the ½ — it comes from the base-height formula
Check degree mode —
What Comes Next in Deck Two
In Deck 2 (Triangle Area — Applications and Interpretation):
- Using all three equivalent forms — choosing the right one
- Geometric interpretation: how angle
controls area for fixed sides - Why area is maximized when
- Real-world applications: surveying, parallelograms, land plots
- Formula selection: when to use
vs. vs. Heron's formula
Forward connections: HSG.SRT.D.10 (Law of Sines), physics —
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Derive triangle area formula