SlideShare a Scribd company logo
13.6 Circular Functions  Define and use the trigonometric functions based on the unit circle. Find the exact value of trigonometric functions of angles.
THE UNIT CIRCLE
A circle with center at (0, 0) and radius 1 is called a unit circle.  The equation of this circle would be  So points on this circle must satisfy this equation.  (1,0) (0,1) (0,-1) (-1,0)
Let's pick a point on the circle.  We'll choose a point where the  x  is 1/2.  If the  x  is 1/2, what is the  y  value?  (1,0) (0,1) (0,-1) (-1,0) x = 1/2 You can see there are two  y  values.  They can be found by putting 1/2 into the equation for  x  and solving for  y . We'll look at a larger version of this and make a right triangle.
  The Circular Functions Circular Functions
(1,0) (0,1) (0,-1) (-1,0)  We know all of the sides of this triangle.  The bottom leg is just the  x  value of the point, the other leg is just the  y  value and the hypotenuse is always 1 because it is a radius of the circle. Notice the sine is just the  y  value of the unit circle point and the cosine is just the  x  value.
(1,0) (0,1) (0,-1) (-1,0) We divide the unit circle into various pieces and learn the point values so we can then from memory find trig functions.  So if I want a trig function for    whose terminal side contains a point on the unit circle, the  y  value is the sine, the  x  value is the cosine and  y / x  is the tangent.
Here is the unit circle divided into 8 pieces.  Can you figure out how many degrees are in each division? 45 ° We can label this all the way around with how many degrees an angle would be and the point on the unit circle that corresponds with the terminal side of the angle.  We could then find any of the trig functions. 45 ° 90 ° 0 ° 135 ° 180 ° 225 ° 270 ° 315° These are easy to memorize since they all have the same value with different signs depending on the quadrant.
Can you figure out what these angles would be in radians? The circle is 2   all the way around so half way is   .  The upper half is divided into 4 pieces so each piece is   /4. 45 ° 90 ° 0 ° 135 ° 180 ° 225 ° 270 ° 315°
Here is the unit circle divided into 12 pieces.  Can you figure out how many degrees are in each division? 30 ° We can again label the points on the circle and the sine is the  y  value, the cosine is the  x  value and the tangent is  y  over  x . 30 ° 90 ° 0 ° 120 ° 180 ° 210 ° 270 ° 330° You'll need to memorize these too but you can see the pattern. 60 ° 150 ° 240 ° 300 °
Can you figure out what the angles would be in radians? 30 ° It is still    halfway around the circle and the upper half is divided into 6 pieces so each piece is   /6. 30 ° 90 ° 0 ° 120 ° 180 ° 210 ° 270 ° 330° 60 ° 150 ° 240 ° 300 ° We'll see them all put together on the unit circle on the next screen.
You should memorize this.  This is a great reference because you can figure out the trig functions of all these angles quickly.
Let’s think about the function  f (  ) = sin   What is the domain?  (remember domain means the “legal” things you can put in for     ). You can put in anything you want so the domain is all real numbers. What is the range?  (remember range means what you get out of the function) . The range is:  -1    sin       1 (1, 0) (0, 1) (-1, 0) (0, -1) Let’s look at the unit circle to answer that.  What is the lowest and highest value you’d ever get for sine?  (sine is the  y  value so what is the lowest and highest  y  value?)
Let’s think about the function  f (  ) = cos   What is the domain?  (remember domain means the “legal” things you can put in for     ). You can put in anything you want so the domain is all real numbers. What is the range?  (remember range means what you get out of the function) . The range is:  -1    cos        1 (1, 0) (0, 1) (-1, 0) (0, -1) Let’s look at the unit circle to answer that.  What is the lowest and highest value you’d ever get for cosine?  (cosine is the  x  value so what is the lowest and highest  x  value?)
What does the graph of sine and cosine look like? This same information is presented on the graphs of the sine and cosine functions, where the horizontal axis shows the values of  and the vertical axis shows the values of sin  or  cos  . Note we will learn how to graph trig functions in  chapter 14.
Circular Graphs Here we can see what happens when we plot the function y=sin(x) on a graph.  x is the angle and  y is the y coordinate on the unit circle? http://www.ies.co.jp/math/products/trig/applets/graphSinX/graphSinX.html
Circular Graphs What would happen after 360 °? After 360 ° you would circle the unit circle again and again with the same y values so the curve would repeat itself forever.
Circular Functions All trigonometric functions or  Circular functions  have values that repeat around the unit circle. Because of this they all have “curves” that repeat when they are graphed.
Sin and Cos Graphs The Sine graph looks like:
Sin and Cos Graphs What would the graph y=cos(x) look like? Similar to the graph for sin since it is still all the same values from the unit circle, but since it is the x coordinate it will look different, lets graph it
Cos Graph
Domain and Range What is the domain of both of these functions? What is the range?
Look at the unit circle and determine sin 420 °. All the way around is 360 ° so we’ll need more than that.  We see that it will be the same as sin 60° since they are  coterminal angles.  So  sin 420 ° =  sin 60°. In fact sin 780 ° = sin 60° since that is just another 360° beyond 420°.  Because the sine values are equal for coterminal angles that are multiples of 360° added to an angle, we say that the sine is  periodic  with a period of 360° or 2  .
Periodic Functions A periodic function is a function with a repeating pattern this includes sin and cos graphs.
 
The cosine is also periodic with a period of 360° or 2  . We see that they repeat every     so the tangent’s period is   . Let's label the unit circle with values of the tangent.  (Remember this is just  y / x )
Reciprocal functions have the same period. PERIODIC PROPERTIES sin(   + 2  ) = sin      cosec(   + 2  ) = cosec     cos(   + 2  ) = cos     sec(   + 2  ) = sec    tan(   +   ) = tan     cot(   +   ) = cot   1 (you can count around on unit circle or subtract the period twice.) This would have the same value as
Now let’s look at the unit circle to compare trig functions of positive vs. negative angles. Remember negative angle means to go clockwise
Recall from College Algebra that if we put a negative in the function and get the original back it is an  even function .
Recall from College Algebra that if we put a negative in the function and get the negative of the function back it is an  odd function .
If a function is even, its reciprocal function will be also.  If a function is odd its reciprocal will be also. EVEN-ODD PROPERTIES sin(-     ) = - sin      (odd)   cosec(-     ) = - cosec      (odd) cos(-     ) = cos     (even)   sec(-     ) = sec     (even) tan(-     ) = - tan     (odd)   cot(-     ) = - cot     (odd)

More Related Content

PDF
Circular Functions
PDF
6.2 Unit Circle and Circular Functions
PPTX
PC_Q2_W1-2_Angles in a Unit Circle Presentation PPT
PDF
Conic Section: Circles (Pre-Calculus).pdf
PPTX
Sequences and series
PPTX
1 illustrating limit of a function
PPTX
Grade 11 STEM (2023~2024) Hyperbolas.pptx
PPTX
Lesson no. 2 (Angles in Standard Position and Coterminal Angles )
Circular Functions
6.2 Unit Circle and Circular Functions
PC_Q2_W1-2_Angles in a Unit Circle Presentation PPT
Conic Section: Circles (Pre-Calculus).pdf
Sequences and series
1 illustrating limit of a function
Grade 11 STEM (2023~2024) Hyperbolas.pptx
Lesson no. 2 (Angles in Standard Position and Coterminal Angles )

What's hot (20)

PDF
6 1 2 law of sines and cosines
PPTX
Law of sines
PPTX
Graphing polynomial functions (Grade 10)
PPT
Triangle inequalities
PDF
Math 7 Curriculum Guide rev.2016
PPTX
Week 6 parallelogram
PPTX
Math 9 similar triangles intro
PPTX
Arcs and Central Angles
PDF
Trigonometry - The Six Trigonometric Ratios
PPT
Introduction to Postulates and Theorems
PPTX
Triangle Congruence (Introduction)
PDF
Piecewise functions
PPTX
Math 8 - Linear Inequalities in Two Variables
PPTX
Similar triangles
PPT
Hyperbola
PPT
Right triangle similarity
PPTX
Sas congruence postulate
PPTX
Lesson 1- Math 10 - W1Q1_ Arithmetic Sequences and Series.pptx
PPT
angle of elevation and depression
PPTX
ASA, SAS,AAS,SSS
6 1 2 law of sines and cosines
Law of sines
Graphing polynomial functions (Grade 10)
Triangle inequalities
Math 7 Curriculum Guide rev.2016
Week 6 parallelogram
Math 9 similar triangles intro
Arcs and Central Angles
Trigonometry - The Six Trigonometric Ratios
Introduction to Postulates and Theorems
Triangle Congruence (Introduction)
Piecewise functions
Math 8 - Linear Inequalities in Two Variables
Similar triangles
Hyperbola
Right triangle similarity
Sas congruence postulate
Lesson 1- Math 10 - W1Q1_ Arithmetic Sequences and Series.pptx
angle of elevation and depression
ASA, SAS,AAS,SSS
Ad

Similar to Circular functions (20)

PPTX
Trigonometry and trigonometric ratios angles
PPT
Trigonometry
PPT
unit_circle_lesson_in trigonometric functions
PPT
Trigonometry Functions
PDF
T7.3 The Unit Circle and Angles Presentation
PDF
CBSE - Grade 11 - Mathematics - Ch 3 - Trigonometric Functions - Notes (PDF F...
PPT
Larson 4.2
PDF
Module 4 circular functions
PPTX
Unit-Circle.pptxhdhshdbbdbsbbdbxi duhdbd
PPTX
Unit 4.3
PPTX
dfadfadagdadgaTopic01BasicTrigonometry-converted.pptx
PPT
Trigonometric Function
PDF
circular trigonometric functions and practice
PPT
Section 4.3 MA.pptSection 4.3 MA.pptSection 4.3 MA.ppt
PPTX
IntroductiontoTrigonometricFunctionsSineandCosine-1.pptx
PDF
Trigonometry_Short_Course_Tutorial_Lauren_Johnson.pdf
PPT
Higher Maths 1.2.3 - Trigonometric Functions
PPTX
Circular-Functions-An-Overview Lesson.pptx
PPT
Sine, cosine, tangent and cotangent of an angle and their measure.ppt
PPT
Hprec6 4
Trigonometry and trigonometric ratios angles
Trigonometry
unit_circle_lesson_in trigonometric functions
Trigonometry Functions
T7.3 The Unit Circle and Angles Presentation
CBSE - Grade 11 - Mathematics - Ch 3 - Trigonometric Functions - Notes (PDF F...
Larson 4.2
Module 4 circular functions
Unit-Circle.pptxhdhshdbbdbsbbdbxi duhdbd
Unit 4.3
dfadfadagdadgaTopic01BasicTrigonometry-converted.pptx
Trigonometric Function
circular trigonometric functions and practice
Section 4.3 MA.pptSection 4.3 MA.pptSection 4.3 MA.ppt
IntroductiontoTrigonometricFunctionsSineandCosine-1.pptx
Trigonometry_Short_Course_Tutorial_Lauren_Johnson.pdf
Higher Maths 1.2.3 - Trigonometric Functions
Circular-Functions-An-Overview Lesson.pptx
Sine, cosine, tangent and cotangent of an angle and their measure.ppt
Hprec6 4
Ad

More from Jessica Garcia (20)

DOCX
Test 1 a_ratios_and_proportional_reasoning
DOCX
Unit 2 Proportions Reasoning Rubric
DOCX
Throw a dinner party report
PPT
DOCX
Reteach constant rate of change
DOCX
Skills practice constant rate of change
PPT
Rate of change
PPT
Rate of change and slope
PPTX
How do fractions apply to unit rates?7th daily 10 14-14 complex fractions and...
PPTX
7th daily 10 13-14 rates and unit rates
PPTX
7th daily 10 10-14 proportions vocabulary and long division
PPTX
7th daily 10 10-14 proportions vocabulary and long division
PPTX
Part 1: Vocabulary; How do you solve proportions?
PPTX
Systems of equaions graphing
PPT
Real numbers
PPT
PPT
Square and square roots
PPTX
Jeopardy laws of exponents
PPT
Compute with scientific notation
PPTX
Scientific notation ppt
Test 1 a_ratios_and_proportional_reasoning
Unit 2 Proportions Reasoning Rubric
Throw a dinner party report
Reteach constant rate of change
Skills practice constant rate of change
Rate of change
Rate of change and slope
How do fractions apply to unit rates?7th daily 10 14-14 complex fractions and...
7th daily 10 13-14 rates and unit rates
7th daily 10 10-14 proportions vocabulary and long division
7th daily 10 10-14 proportions vocabulary and long division
Part 1: Vocabulary; How do you solve proportions?
Systems of equaions graphing
Real numbers
Square and square roots
Jeopardy laws of exponents
Compute with scientific notation
Scientific notation ppt

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Machine learning based COVID-19 study performance prediction
PPTX
KOM of Painting work and Equipment Insulation REV00 update 25-dec.pptx
PDF
Optimiser vos workloads AI/ML sur Amazon EC2 et AWS Graviton
PDF
Build a system with the filesystem maintained by OSTree @ COSCUP 2025
PDF
The Rise and Fall of 3GPP – Time for a Sabbatical?
PDF
Review of recent advances in non-invasive hemoglobin estimation
PPTX
Cloud computing and distributed systems.
PDF
Spectral efficient network and resource selection model in 5G networks
PDF
KodekX | Application Modernization Development
PDF
MIND Revenue Release Quarter 2 2025 Press Release
PDF
Mobile App Security Testing_ A Comprehensive Guide.pdf
PDF
Building Integrated photovoltaic BIPV_UPV.pdf
PPTX
Detection-First SIEM: Rule Types, Dashboards, and Threat-Informed Strategy
PDF
Per capita expenditure prediction using model stacking based on satellite ima...
PDF
Encapsulation_ Review paper, used for researhc scholars
PDF
How UI/UX Design Impacts User Retention in Mobile Apps.pdf
PDF
Approach and Philosophy of On baking technology
PDF
Encapsulation theory and applications.pdf
PDF
Agricultural_Statistics_at_a_Glance_2022_0.pdf
PDF
Unlocking AI with Model Context Protocol (MCP)
Machine learning based COVID-19 study performance prediction
KOM of Painting work and Equipment Insulation REV00 update 25-dec.pptx
Optimiser vos workloads AI/ML sur Amazon EC2 et AWS Graviton
Build a system with the filesystem maintained by OSTree @ COSCUP 2025
The Rise and Fall of 3GPP – Time for a Sabbatical?
Review of recent advances in non-invasive hemoglobin estimation
Cloud computing and distributed systems.
Spectral efficient network and resource selection model in 5G networks
KodekX | Application Modernization Development
MIND Revenue Release Quarter 2 2025 Press Release
Mobile App Security Testing_ A Comprehensive Guide.pdf
Building Integrated photovoltaic BIPV_UPV.pdf
Detection-First SIEM: Rule Types, Dashboards, and Threat-Informed Strategy
Per capita expenditure prediction using model stacking based on satellite ima...
Encapsulation_ Review paper, used for researhc scholars
How UI/UX Design Impacts User Retention in Mobile Apps.pdf
Approach and Philosophy of On baking technology
Encapsulation theory and applications.pdf
Agricultural_Statistics_at_a_Glance_2022_0.pdf
Unlocking AI with Model Context Protocol (MCP)

Circular functions

  • 1. 13.6 Circular Functions Define and use the trigonometric functions based on the unit circle. Find the exact value of trigonometric functions of angles.
  • 3. A circle with center at (0, 0) and radius 1 is called a unit circle. The equation of this circle would be So points on this circle must satisfy this equation. (1,0) (0,1) (0,-1) (-1,0)
  • 4. Let's pick a point on the circle. We'll choose a point where the x is 1/2. If the x is 1/2, what is the y value? (1,0) (0,1) (0,-1) (-1,0) x = 1/2 You can see there are two y values. They can be found by putting 1/2 into the equation for x and solving for y . We'll look at a larger version of this and make a right triangle.
  • 5. The Circular Functions Circular Functions
  • 6. (1,0) (0,1) (0,-1) (-1,0)  We know all of the sides of this triangle. The bottom leg is just the x value of the point, the other leg is just the y value and the hypotenuse is always 1 because it is a radius of the circle. Notice the sine is just the y value of the unit circle point and the cosine is just the x value.
  • 7. (1,0) (0,1) (0,-1) (-1,0) We divide the unit circle into various pieces and learn the point values so we can then from memory find trig functions.  So if I want a trig function for  whose terminal side contains a point on the unit circle, the y value is the sine, the x value is the cosine and y / x is the tangent.
  • 8. Here is the unit circle divided into 8 pieces. Can you figure out how many degrees are in each division? 45 ° We can label this all the way around with how many degrees an angle would be and the point on the unit circle that corresponds with the terminal side of the angle. We could then find any of the trig functions. 45 ° 90 ° 0 ° 135 ° 180 ° 225 ° 270 ° 315° These are easy to memorize since they all have the same value with different signs depending on the quadrant.
  • 9. Can you figure out what these angles would be in radians? The circle is 2  all the way around so half way is  . The upper half is divided into 4 pieces so each piece is  /4. 45 ° 90 ° 0 ° 135 ° 180 ° 225 ° 270 ° 315°
  • 10. Here is the unit circle divided into 12 pieces. Can you figure out how many degrees are in each division? 30 ° We can again label the points on the circle and the sine is the y value, the cosine is the x value and the tangent is y over x . 30 ° 90 ° 0 ° 120 ° 180 ° 210 ° 270 ° 330° You'll need to memorize these too but you can see the pattern. 60 ° 150 ° 240 ° 300 °
  • 11. Can you figure out what the angles would be in radians? 30 ° It is still  halfway around the circle and the upper half is divided into 6 pieces so each piece is  /6. 30 ° 90 ° 0 ° 120 ° 180 ° 210 ° 270 ° 330° 60 ° 150 ° 240 ° 300 ° We'll see them all put together on the unit circle on the next screen.
  • 12. You should memorize this. This is a great reference because you can figure out the trig functions of all these angles quickly.
  • 13. Let’s think about the function f (  ) = sin  What is the domain? (remember domain means the “legal” things you can put in for  ). You can put in anything you want so the domain is all real numbers. What is the range? (remember range means what you get out of the function) . The range is: -1  sin   1 (1, 0) (0, 1) (-1, 0) (0, -1) Let’s look at the unit circle to answer that. What is the lowest and highest value you’d ever get for sine? (sine is the y value so what is the lowest and highest y value?)
  • 14. Let’s think about the function f (  ) = cos  What is the domain? (remember domain means the “legal” things you can put in for  ). You can put in anything you want so the domain is all real numbers. What is the range? (remember range means what you get out of the function) . The range is: -1  cos   1 (1, 0) (0, 1) (-1, 0) (0, -1) Let’s look at the unit circle to answer that. What is the lowest and highest value you’d ever get for cosine? (cosine is the x value so what is the lowest and highest x value?)
  • 15. What does the graph of sine and cosine look like? This same information is presented on the graphs of the sine and cosine functions, where the horizontal axis shows the values of and the vertical axis shows the values of sin or cos . Note we will learn how to graph trig functions in chapter 14.
  • 16. Circular Graphs Here we can see what happens when we plot the function y=sin(x) on a graph. x is the angle and y is the y coordinate on the unit circle? http://www.ies.co.jp/math/products/trig/applets/graphSinX/graphSinX.html
  • 17. Circular Graphs What would happen after 360 °? After 360 ° you would circle the unit circle again and again with the same y values so the curve would repeat itself forever.
  • 18. Circular Functions All trigonometric functions or Circular functions have values that repeat around the unit circle. Because of this they all have “curves” that repeat when they are graphed.
  • 19. Sin and Cos Graphs The Sine graph looks like:
  • 20. Sin and Cos Graphs What would the graph y=cos(x) look like? Similar to the graph for sin since it is still all the same values from the unit circle, but since it is the x coordinate it will look different, lets graph it
  • 22. Domain and Range What is the domain of both of these functions? What is the range?
  • 23. Look at the unit circle and determine sin 420 °. All the way around is 360 ° so we’ll need more than that. We see that it will be the same as sin 60° since they are coterminal angles. So sin 420 ° = sin 60°. In fact sin 780 ° = sin 60° since that is just another 360° beyond 420°. Because the sine values are equal for coterminal angles that are multiples of 360° added to an angle, we say that the sine is periodic with a period of 360° or 2  .
  • 24. Periodic Functions A periodic function is a function with a repeating pattern this includes sin and cos graphs.
  • 25.  
  • 26. The cosine is also periodic with a period of 360° or 2  . We see that they repeat every  so the tangent’s period is  . Let's label the unit circle with values of the tangent. (Remember this is just y / x )
  • 27. Reciprocal functions have the same period. PERIODIC PROPERTIES sin(  + 2  ) = sin  cosec(  + 2  ) = cosec  cos(  + 2  ) = cos  sec(  + 2  ) = sec  tan(  +  ) = tan  cot(  +  ) = cot  1 (you can count around on unit circle or subtract the period twice.) This would have the same value as
  • 28. Now let’s look at the unit circle to compare trig functions of positive vs. negative angles. Remember negative angle means to go clockwise
  • 29. Recall from College Algebra that if we put a negative in the function and get the original back it is an even function .
  • 30. Recall from College Algebra that if we put a negative in the function and get the negative of the function back it is an odd function .
  • 31. If a function is even, its reciprocal function will be also. If a function is odd its reciprocal will be also. EVEN-ODD PROPERTIES sin(-  ) = - sin  (odd) cosec(-  ) = - cosec  (odd) cos(-  ) = cos  (even) sec(-  ) = sec  (even) tan(-  ) = - tan  (odd) cot(-  ) = - cot  (odd)