Trigonometric constants expressed in real radicals

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The primary solution angles[clarification needed] on the unit circle are at multiples of 30 and 45 degrees.

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Exact algebraic expressions for trigonometric values are sometimes useful, mainly for simplifying solutions into radical forms which allow further simplification.

All trigonometric numbers—sines or cosines of rational multiples of 360°—are algebraic numbers (solutions of polynomial equations with integer coefficients); but not all of these are expressible in terms of real radicals. When they are, they are expressible more specifically in terms of square roots.

All values of the sines, cosines, and tangents of angles at 3° increments are derivable in radicals using identities—the half-angle identity, the double-angle identity, and the angle addition/subtraction identity—and using values for 0°, 30°, 36°, and 45°. Note that 1° = <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />π/180 radians.

According to Niven's theorem, the only rational values of the sine function for which the argument is a rational number of degrees are 0, 1/2,  1, −1/2, and −1.

According to Baker's theorem, if the value of a sine, a cosine or a tangent is algebraic, then either the angle is rational number of degrees, or the angle is a transcendental number of degrees. That is, if the angle is an algebraic, but non-rational, number of degrees, the trigonometric functions have a transcendental value.

Contents

Scope of this article

The list in this article is incomplete in several senses. First, the trigonometric functions of all angles that are integer multiples of those given can also be expressed in radicals, but some are omitted here.

Second, it is always possible to apply the half-angle formula to find an expression in radicals for a trigonometric function of one-half of any angle on the list, then half of that angle, etc.

Third, expressions in real radicals exist for a trigonometric function of a rational multiple of π if and only if the denominator of the fully reduced rational multiple is a power of 2 by itself or the product of a power of 2 with the product of distinct Fermat primes, of which the known ones are 3, 5, 17, 257, and 65537. This article only gives the cases based on the Fermat primes 3 and 5. Thus for example \cos(2\pi/17), given in the article 17-gon, is not given here.

Fourth, this article only deals with trigonometric function values when the expression in radicals is in real radicals—roots of real numbers. Many other trigonometric function values are expressible in, for example, cube roots of complex numbers that cannot be rewritten in terms of roots of real numbers. For example, the trigonometric function values of any angle that is one-third of an angle \theta considered in this article can be expressed in cube roots and square roots by using the cubic equation formula to solve

4\cos^3 \frac \theta 3 - 3\cos \frac \theta 3 = \cos\theta,

but in general the solution for the cosine of the one-third angle involves the cube root of a complex number (giving casus irreducibilis).

In practice, all values of sines, cosines, and tangents not found in this article are approximated using the techniques described at Generating trigonometric tables.

Table of some common angles

Turns <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />1/12 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />2/12=<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />1/6 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />4/12=<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />1/3 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />5/12 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />7/12 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />8/12=<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />2/3 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />10/12=<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />5/6 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />11/12
Degrees 30° 60° 120° 150° 210° 240° 300° 330°
Radians <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />π/6 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />π/3 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />2π/3 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />5π/6 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />7π/6 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />4π/3 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />5π/3 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />11π/6
Gradians <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />33+1/3g <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />66+2/3g <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />133+1/3g <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />166+2/3g <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />233+1/3g <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />266+2/3g <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />333+1/3g <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />366+2/3g
sine <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />1/2 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />3/2 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />3/2 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />1/2 -<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />1/2 -<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />3/2 -<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />3/2 -<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />1/2
cosine <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />3/2 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />1/2 -<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />1/2 -<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />3/2 -<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />3/2 -<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />1/2 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />1/2 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />3/2
tangent <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />3/3 3 -3 -<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />3/3 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />3/3 3 -3 -<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />3/3
Turns <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />1/8 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />2/8=<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />3/12=<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />1/4 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />3/8 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />4/8=<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />1/2 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />5/8 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />6/8=<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />3/4 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />7/8 1
Degrees 45° 90° 135° 180° 225° 270° 315° 360°
Radians <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />π/4 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />π/2 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />3π/4 π <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />5π/4 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />3π/2 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />7π/4 2π
Gradians 50g 100g 150g 200g 250g 300g 350g 400g
sine <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />2/2 1 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />2/2 0 -<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />2/2 -1 -<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />2/2 0
cosine <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />2/2 0 -<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />2/2 -1 -<templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />2/2 0 <templatestyles src="Sfrac/styles.css" />2/2 1
tangent 1 -1 0 1 -1 0

Table of constants

Values outside the [0°, 45°] angle range are trivially derived from these values, using circle axis reflection symmetry. (See Trigonometric identity.)

In the entries below, when a certain number of degrees is related to a regular polygon, the relation is that the number of degrees in each angle of the polygon is (n – 2) times the indicated number of degrees (where n is the number of sides). This is because the sum of the angles of any n-gon is 180°×(n – 2) and so the measure of each angle of any regular n-gon is 180°×(n – 2) ÷ n. Thus for example the entry "45°: square" means that, with n = 4, 180° ÷ n = 45°, and the number of degrees in each angle of a square is (n – 2)×45° = 90°.

0°: fundamental

\sin 0=0\,
\cos 0=1\,
\tan 0=0\,
\cot 0\text{ is undefined}\,

1.5°: regular hecatonicosagon (120-sided polygon)

\sin\left(\frac{\pi}{120}\right) = \sin(1.5^\circ) = \frac{\left(\sqrt{2+\sqrt2}\right)\left(\sqrt{15}+\sqrt3-\sqrt{10-2\sqrt5}\right) - \left(\sqrt{2-\sqrt2}\right)\left(\sqrt{30-6\sqrt5}+\sqrt5+1\right)}{16}
\cos\left(\frac{\pi}{120}\right) = \cos(1.5^\circ) = \frac{\left(\sqrt{2+\sqrt2}\right)\left(\sqrt{30-6\sqrt5}+\sqrt5+1\right) + \left(\sqrt{2-\sqrt2}\right)\left(\sqrt{15}+\sqrt3-\sqrt{10-2\sqrt5}\right)}{16}

1.875°: regular enneacontahexagon (96-sided polygon)

\sin\left(\frac{\pi}{96}\right) = \sin(1.875^\circ) = \frac{\sqrt{2-\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2+\sqrt{3}}}}}}{2}
\cos\left(\frac{\pi}{96}\right) = \cos(1.875^\circ) = \frac{\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2+\sqrt{3}}}}}}{2}

2.25°: regular octacontagon (80-sided polygon)

\sin\left(\frac{\pi}{80}\right) = \sin(2.25^\circ) = \frac{\left(\sqrt{2+\sqrt2}-1\right)\sqrt{2\bigg(5-\sqrt5\bigg)\left(2+\sqrt{2+\sqrt2}\right)}-\left(\sqrt5+1\right)\left(\sqrt{2+\sqrt2}+1\right)\sqrt{2-\sqrt{2+\sqrt2}}}{8}
\cos\left(\frac{\pi}{80}\right) = \cos(2.25^\circ) = \sqrt{\frac{1}{2}+\sqrt{\frac{4+\sqrt{8+2\sqrt{10+2\sqrt5}}}{32}}}

2.8125°: regular hexacontatetragon (64-sided polygon)

\sin\left(\frac{\pi}{64}\right) = \sin(2.8125^\circ) = \frac{\sqrt{2-\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}}}}}}{2}
\cos\left(\frac{\pi}{64}\right) = \cos(2.8125^\circ) = \frac{\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}}}}}}{2}

3°: regular hexacontagon (60-sided polygon)

\sin\left(\frac{\pi}{60}\right) = \sin(3^\circ) = \frac{2(1-\sqrt3)\sqrt{5+\sqrt5}+(\sqrt{10}-\sqrt2)(\sqrt3+1)}{16}\,
\cos\left(\frac{\pi}{60}\right) = \cos(3^\circ) = \frac{2(1+\sqrt3)\sqrt{5+\sqrt5}+(\sqrt{10}-\sqrt2)(\sqrt3-1)}{16}\,
\tan\left(\frac{\pi}{60}\right) = \tan(3^\circ) = \frac{\left[(2-\sqrt3)(3+\sqrt5)-2\right]\left[2-\sqrt{10-2\sqrt5}\right]}{4}\,
\cot\left(\frac{\pi}{60}\right) = \cot(3^\circ) = \frac{\left[(2+\sqrt3)(3+\sqrt5)-2\right]\left[2+\sqrt{10-2\sqrt5}\right]}{4}\,

3.75°: regular tetracontaoctagon (48-sided polygon)

\sin\left(\frac{\pi}{48}\right) = \sin(3.75^\circ) = \frac{\sqrt{2-\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2+\sqrt{3}}}}}{2}
\cos\left(\frac{\pi}{48}\right) = \cos(3.75^\circ) = \frac{\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2+\sqrt{3}}}}}{2}

4.5°: regular tetracontagon (40-sided polygon)

\sin\left(\frac{\pi}{40}\right) = \sin(4.5^\circ) = \frac{(\sqrt2-1)\sqrt{2(2+\sqrt2)(5+\sqrt{5})}-(\sqrt2+1)(\sqrt5-1)\sqrt{2-\sqrt2}}{8}
\cos\left(\frac{\pi}{40}\right) = \cos(4.5^\circ) = \frac{(\sqrt2+1)\sqrt{2(2-\sqrt2)(5+\sqrt{5})}+(\sqrt2-1)(\sqrt5-1)\sqrt{2+\sqrt2}}{8}

5.625°: regular triacontadigon (32-sided polygon)

\sin\left(\frac{\pi}{32}\right) = \sin(5.625^\circ) = \frac{\sqrt{2-\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}}}}}{2}
\cos\left(\frac{\pi}{32}\right) = \cos(5.625^\circ) = \frac{\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}}}}}{2}

6°: regular triacontagon (30-sided polygon)

\sin\frac{\pi}{30}=\sin 6^\circ=\frac{\sqrt{30-\sqrt{180}}-\sqrt5-1}{8}\,
\cos\frac{\pi}{30}=\cos 6^\circ=\frac{\sqrt{10-\sqrt{20}}+\sqrt3+\sqrt{15}}{8}\,
\tan\frac{\pi}{30}=\tan 6^\circ=\frac{\sqrt{10-\sqrt{20}}+\sqrt3-\sqrt{15}}{2}\,
\cot\frac{\pi}{30}=\cot 6^\circ=\frac{\sqrt{27}+\sqrt{15}+\sqrt{50+\sqrt{2420}}}{2}\,

7.5°: regular icositetragon (24-sided polygon)

\sin\left(\frac{\pi}{24}\right)=\sin(7.5^\circ)=\frac{\sqrt{2-\sqrt{2+\sqrt3}}}{2} = \frac{\sqrt{2-\tfrac{\sqrt6+\sqrt2}{2}}}{2} = \frac{\sqrt{2(4-\sqrt6-\sqrt2)}}{4}\,
\cos\left(\frac{\pi}{24}\right)=\cos(7.5^\circ)=\frac{\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2+\sqrt3}}}{2} = \frac{\sqrt{2+\tfrac{\sqrt6+\sqrt2}{2}}}{2} = \frac{\sqrt{2(4+\sqrt6+\sqrt2)}}{4}\,
\tan\left(\frac{\pi}{24}\right)=\tan(7.5^\circ)=\sqrt6-\sqrt3+\sqrt2-2\ = (\sqrt2-1)(\sqrt3-\sqrt2)
\cot\left(\frac{\pi}{24}\right)=\cot(7.5^\circ)=\sqrt6+\sqrt3+\sqrt2+2\ = (\sqrt2+1)(\sqrt3+\sqrt2)

9°: regular icosagon (20-sided polygon)

\sin\frac{\pi}{20}=\sin 9^\circ=\tfrac{1}{8} \left[\sqrt{10}+\sqrt2-2\sqrt{5-\sqrt5}\right]\,
\cos\frac{\pi}{20}=\cos 9^\circ=\tfrac{1}{8} \left[\sqrt{10}+\sqrt2+2\sqrt{5-\sqrt5}\right]\,
\tan\frac{\pi}{20}=\tan 9^\circ=\sqrt5+1-\sqrt{5+2\sqrt5}\,
\cot\frac{\pi}{20}=\cot 9^\circ=\sqrt5+1+\sqrt{5+2\sqrt5}\,

11.25°: regular hexadecagon (16-sided polygon)

\sin\frac{\pi}{16}=\sin 11.25^\circ=\tfrac{1}{2}\sqrt{2-\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}}}
\cos\frac{\pi}{16}=\cos 11.25^\circ=\tfrac{1}{2}\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}}}
\tan\frac{\pi}{16}=\tan 11.25^\circ=\sqrt{4+2\sqrt{2}}-\sqrt{2}-1
\cot\frac{\pi}{16}=\cot 11.25^\circ=\sqrt{4+2\sqrt{2}}+\sqrt{2}+1

12°: regular pentadecagon (15-sided polygon)

\sin\frac{\pi}{15}=\sin 12^\circ=\tfrac{1}{8} \left[\sqrt{2(5+\sqrt5)}+\sqrt3-\sqrt{15}\right]\,
\cos\frac{\pi}{15}=\cos 12^\circ=\tfrac{1}{8} \left[\sqrt{6(5+\sqrt5)}+\sqrt5-1\right]\,
\tan\frac{\pi}{15}=\tan 12^\circ=\tfrac{1}{2} \left[3\sqrt3-\sqrt{15}-\sqrt{2(25-11\sqrt5)}\right]\,
\cot\frac{\pi}{15}=\cot 12^\circ=\tfrac{1}{2} \left[\sqrt{15}+\sqrt3+\sqrt{2(5+\sqrt5)}\right]\,

15°: regular dodecagon (12-sided polygon)

\sin\left(\frac{\pi}{12}\right)=\sin(15^\circ)=\frac{\sqrt6-\sqrt2}{4}
\cos\left(\frac{\pi}{12}\right)=\cos(15^\circ)=\frac{\sqrt6+\sqrt2}{4}
\tan\left(\frac{\pi}{12}\right)=\tan(15^\circ)=2-\sqrt3
\cot\left(\frac{\pi}{12}\right)=\cot(15^\circ)=2+\sqrt3

18°: regular decagon (10-sided polygon)

[1]

\sin\frac{\pi}{10}=\sin 18^\circ=\tfrac{1}{4}\left(\sqrt5-1\right)\,
\cos\frac{\pi}{10}=\cos 18^\circ=\tfrac{1}{4}\sqrt{2(5+\sqrt5)}\,
\tan\frac{\pi}{10}=\tan 18^\circ=\tfrac{1}{5}\sqrt{5(5-2\sqrt5)}\,
\cot\frac{\pi}{10}=\cot 18^\circ=\sqrt{5+2\sqrt 5}\,

21°: sum 9° + 12°

\sin\frac{7\pi}{60}=\sin 21^\circ=\tfrac{1}{16}\left[2(\sqrt3+1)\sqrt{5-\sqrt5}-(\sqrt6-\sqrt2)(1+\sqrt5)\right]\,
\cos\frac{7\pi}{60}=\cos 21^\circ=\tfrac{1}{16}\left[2(\sqrt3-1)\sqrt{5-\sqrt5}+(\sqrt6+\sqrt2)(1+\sqrt5)\right]\,
\tan\frac{7\pi}{60}=\tan 21^\circ=\tfrac{1}{4}\left[2-(2+\sqrt3)(3-\sqrt5)\right]\left[2-\sqrt{2(5+\sqrt5)}\right]\,
\cot\frac{7\pi}{60}=\cot 21^\circ=\tfrac{1}{4}\left[2-(2-\sqrt3)(3-\sqrt5)\right]\left[2+\sqrt{2(5+\sqrt5)}\right]\,

22.5°: regular octagon

\sin\frac{\pi}{8}=\sin 22.5^\circ=\tfrac{1}{2}\sqrt{2-\sqrt{2}},
\cos\frac{\pi}{8}=\cos 22.5^\circ=\tfrac{1}{2}\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}}\,
\tan\frac{\pi}{8}=\tan 22.5^\circ=\sqrt{2}-1\,
\cot\frac{\pi}{8}=\cot 22.5^\circ=\sqrt{2}+1\, (Silver ratio)

24°: sum 12° + 12°

\sin\frac{2\pi}{15}=\sin 24^\circ=\tfrac{1}{8}\left[\sqrt{15}+\sqrt3-\sqrt{2(5-\sqrt5)}\right]\,
\cos\frac{2\pi}{15}=\cos 24^\circ=\tfrac{1}{8}\left(\sqrt{6(5-\sqrt5)}+\sqrt5+1\right)\,
\tan\frac{2\pi}{15}=\tan 24^\circ=\tfrac{1}{2}\left[\sqrt{50+22\sqrt5}-3\sqrt3-\sqrt{15}\right]\,
\cot\frac{2\pi}{15}=\cot 24^\circ=\tfrac{1}{2}\left[\sqrt{15}-\sqrt3+\sqrt{2(5-\sqrt5)}\right]\,

27°: sum 12° + 15°

\sin\frac{3\pi}{20}=\sin 27^\circ=\tfrac{1}{8}\left[2\sqrt{5+\sqrt5}-\sqrt2\;(\sqrt5-1)\right]\,
\cos\frac{3\pi}{20}=\cos 27^\circ=\tfrac{1}{8}\left[2\sqrt{5+\sqrt5}+\sqrt2\;(\sqrt5-1)\right]\,
\tan\frac{3\pi}{20}=\tan 27^\circ=\sqrt5-1-\sqrt{5-2\sqrt5}\,
\cot\frac{3\pi}{20}=\cot 27^\circ=\sqrt5-1+\sqrt{5-2\sqrt5}\,

30°: regular hexagon

\sin\frac{\pi}{6}=\sin 30^\circ=\tfrac{1}{2}\,
\cos\frac{\pi}{6}=\cos 30^\circ=\tfrac{1}{2}\sqrt3\,
\tan\frac{\pi}{6}=\tan 30^\circ=\tfrac{1}{3}\sqrt3=\frac{1}{\sqrt3}\,
\cot\frac{\pi}{6}=\cot 30^\circ=\sqrt3\,

33°: sum 15° + 18°

\sin\frac{11\pi}{60}=\sin 33^\circ=\tfrac{1}{16}\left[2(\sqrt3-1)\sqrt{5+\sqrt5}+\sqrt2(1+\sqrt3)(\sqrt5-1)\right]\,
\cos\frac{11\pi}{60}=\cos 33^\circ=\tfrac{1}{16}\left[2(\sqrt3+1)\sqrt{5+\sqrt5}+\sqrt2(1-\sqrt3)(\sqrt5-1)\right]\,
\tan\frac{11\pi}{60}=\tan 33^\circ=\tfrac{1}{4}\left[2-(2-\sqrt3)(3+\sqrt5)\right]\left[2+\sqrt{2(5-\sqrt5)}\right]\,
\cot\frac{11\pi}{60}=\cot 33^\circ=\tfrac{1}{4}\left[2-(2+\sqrt3)(3+\sqrt5)\right]\left[2-\sqrt{2(5-\sqrt5)}\right]\,

36°: regular pentagon

[1]

\sin\frac{\pi}{5}=\sin 36^\circ=\frac{\sqrt{10-\sqrt{20}}}{4}\,
\cos\frac{\pi}{5}=\cos 36^\circ=\frac{\sqrt5+1}{4}=\tfrac{1}{2}\varphi\,
where  \varphi is the golden ratio;
\tan\frac{\pi}{5}=\tan 36^\circ=\sqrt{5-\sqrt{20}}\,
\cot\frac{\pi}{5}=\cot 36^\circ=\frac{\sqrt{25+\sqrt{500}}}{5}\,

39°: sum 18° + 21°

\sin\frac{13\pi}{60}=\sin 39^\circ=\tfrac1{16}[2(1-\sqrt3)\sqrt{5-\sqrt5}+\sqrt2(\sqrt3+1)(\sqrt5+1)]\,
\cos\frac{13\pi}{60}=\cos 39^\circ=\tfrac1{16}[2(1+\sqrt3)\sqrt{5-\sqrt5}+\sqrt2(\sqrt3-1)(\sqrt5+1)]\,
\tan\frac{13\pi}{60}=\tan 39^\circ=\tfrac14\left[(2-\sqrt3)(3-\sqrt5)-2\right]\left[2-\sqrt{2(5+\sqrt5)}\right]\,
\cot\frac{13\pi}{60}=\cot 39^\circ=\tfrac14\left[(2+\sqrt3)(3-\sqrt5)-2\right]\left[2+\sqrt{2(5+\sqrt5)}\right]\,

42°: sum 21° + 21°

\sin\frac{7\pi}{30}=\sin 42^\circ=\frac{\sqrt{30+\sqrt{180}}-\sqrt5+1}{8}\,
\cos\frac{7\pi}{30}=\cos 42^\circ=\frac{\sqrt{15}-\sqrt3+\sqrt{10+\sqrt{20}}}{8}\,
\tan\frac{7\pi}{30}=\tan 42^\circ=\frac{\sqrt{15}+\sqrt3-\sqrt{10+\sqrt{20}}}{2}\,
\cot\frac{7\pi}{30}=\cot 42^\circ=\frac{\sqrt{50-\sqrt{2420}}+\sqrt{27}-\sqrt{15}}{2}\,

45°: square

\sin\frac{\pi}{4}=\sin 45^\circ=\tfrac12\sqrt2=\frac{1}{\sqrt2}\,
\cos\frac{\pi}{4}=\cos 45^\circ=\tfrac12\sqrt2=\frac{1}{\sqrt2}\,
\tan\frac{\pi}{4}=\tan 45^\circ=1\,
\cot\frac{\pi}{4}=\cot 45^\circ=1\,

54°

\sin\frac{3\pi}{10}=\sin 54^\circ=\frac{\sqrt5+1}{4}\,\!
\cos\frac{3\pi}{10}=\cos 54^\circ=\frac{\sqrt{10-2\sqrt{5}}}{4}
\tan\frac{3\pi}{10}=\tan 54^\circ=\frac{\sqrt{25+\sqrt{500}}}{5}\,
\cot\frac{3\pi}{10}=\cot 54^\circ=\sqrt{5-\sqrt{20}}\,

60°: equilateral triangle

\sin\frac{\pi}{3}=\sin 60^\circ=\tfrac{1}{2}\sqrt3\,
\cos\frac{\pi}{3}=\cos 60^\circ=\tfrac{1}{2}\,
\tan\frac{\pi}{3}=\tan 60^\circ=\sqrt3\,
\cot\frac{\pi}{3}=\cot 60^\circ=\tfrac{1}{3}\sqrt3=\frac{1}{\sqrt3}\,

67.5°

\sin\frac{3\pi}{8}=\sin 67.5^\circ=\tfrac{1}{2}\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}}\,
\cos\frac{3\pi}{8}=\cos 67.5^\circ=\tfrac{1}{2}\sqrt{2-\sqrt{2}}\,
\tan\frac{3\pi}{8}=\tan 67.5^\circ=\sqrt{2}+1\,
\cot\frac{3\pi}{8}=\cot 67.5^\circ=\sqrt{2}-1\,

72°

\sin\frac{2\pi}{5}=\sin 72^\circ=\tfrac{1}{4}\sqrt{2(5+\sqrt5)}\,
\cos\frac{2\pi}{5}=\cos 72^\circ=\tfrac{1}{4}\left(\sqrt5-1\right)\,
\tan\frac{2\pi}{5}=\tan 72^\circ=\sqrt{5+2\sqrt 5}\,
\cot\frac{2\pi}{5}=\cot 72^\circ=\tfrac{1}{5}\sqrt{5(5-2\sqrt5)}\,

75°

\sin\frac{5\pi}{12}=\sin 75^\circ=\tfrac{1}{4}(\sqrt6+\sqrt2)\,
\cos\frac{5\pi}{12}=\cos 75^\circ=\tfrac{1}{4}(\sqrt6-\sqrt2)\,
\tan\frac{5\pi}{12}=\tan 75^\circ=2+\sqrt3\,
\cot\frac{5\pi}{12}=\cot 75^\circ=2-\sqrt3\,

90°: fundamental

\sin \frac{\pi}{2}=\sin 90^\circ=1\,
\cos \frac{\pi}{2}=\cos 90^\circ=0\,
\tan \frac{\pi}{2}=\tan 90^\circ\text{ is undefined}\,
\cot \frac{\pi}{2}=\cot 90^\circ=0\,

Notes

Uses for constants

As an example of the use of these constants, consider a dodecahedron with the following volume, where a is the length of an edge:

V=\frac{5a^3\cos36^\circ}{\tan^2{36^\circ}}

Using

\cos 36^\circ=\frac{\sqrt5+1}{4}\,
\tan 36^\circ=\sqrt{5-2\sqrt5}\,

this can be simplified to:

V=\frac{a^3(15+7\sqrt5)}{4}\,

Derivation triangles

Regular polygon (N-sided) and its fundamental right triangle. Angles: a = 180/n° and b =90(1 − 2/n

The derivation of sine, cosine, and tangent constants into radial forms is based upon the constructibility of right triangles.

Here right triangles made from symmetry sections of regular polygons are used to calculate fundamental trigonometric ratios. Each right triangle represents three points in a regular polygon: a vertex, an edge center containing that vertex, and the polygon center. An n-gon can be divided into 2n right triangles with angles of {180/n, 90 − 180/n, 90} degrees, for n in 3, 4, 5, …

Constructibility of 3, 4, 5, and 15-sided polygons are the basis, and angle bisectors allow multiples of two to also be derived.

  • Constructible
    • 3×2n-sided regular polygons, for n in 0, 1, 2, 3, …
    • 4×2n-sided
    • 5×2n-sided
      • 54°-36°-90° triangle: pentagon (5-sided)
      • 72°-18°-90° triangle: decagon (10-sided)
      • 81°-9°-90° triangle: icosagon (20-sided)
      • 85.5°-4.5°-90° triangle: tetracontagon (40-sided)
      • 87.75°-2.25°-90° triangle: octacontagon (80-sided)
    • 15×2n-sided
    • … (Higher constructible regular polygons don't make whole degree angles: 17, 51, 85, 255, 257, …, 65537, …, 4294967295)
  • Nonconstructible (with whole or half degree angles) – No finite radical expressions involving real numbers for these triangle edge ratios are possible, therefore its multiples of two are also not possible.
    • 9×2n-sided
      • 70°-20°-90° triangle: enneagon (9-sided)
      • 80°-10°-90° triangle: octadecagon (18-sided)
      • 85°-5°-90° triangle: triacontahexagon (36-sided)
      • 87.5°-2.5°-90° triangle: heptacontadigon (72-sided)
    • 45×2n-sided
      • 86°-4°-90° triangle: tetracontapentagon (45-sided)
      • 88°-2°-90° triangle: enneacontagon (90-sided)
      • 89°-1°-90° triangle: 180-gon
      • 89.5°-0.5°-90° triangle: 360-gon

Calculated trigonometric values for sine and cosine

The trivial ones

In degree format: 0, 30, 45, 60, and 90 can be calculated from their triangles, using the Pythagorean theorem.

n × π/(5 × 2m)

Chord(36°) = a/b = 1/\phi, i.e., the reciprocal of the golden ratio, from Ptolemy's theorem

Geometrical method

Applying Ptolemy's theorem to the cyclic quadrilateral ABCD defined by four successive vertices of the pentagon, we can find that:

\operatorname{crd} 36^\circ = \operatorname{crd} (\angle\mathrm{ADB}) = \frac{a}{b} =\frac{2}{1+\sqrt{5}}=\frac{\sqrt{5}-1}{2}

which is the reciprocal 1/φ of the golden ratio. crd is the chord function,

\operatorname{crd}\ {\theta}=2\sin\frac{\theta}{2}.\,

(See also Ptolemy's table of chords.)

Thus

\sin18^\circ=\frac{1}{1+\sqrt{5}}=\frac{\sqrt{5}-1}{4}.

(Alternatively, without using Ptolemy's theorem, label as X the intersection of AC and BD, and note by considering angles that triangle AXB is isosceles, so AX = AB = a. Triangles AXD and CXB are similar, because AD is parallel to BC. So XC = a·(a/b). But AX + XC = AC, so a + a2/b = b. Solving this gives a/b = 1/φ, as above).

Similarly

\operatorname{crd}\ 108^\circ=\operatorname{crd}(\angle\mathrm{ABC})=\frac{b}{a}=\frac{1+\sqrt{5}}{2},

so

\sin 54^\circ=\cos 36^\circ=\frac{1+\sqrt{5}}{4}.

Algebraic method

The multiple angle formulas for functions of 5x\,, where x\in\{18,36,54,72,90\}\, and 5x\in\{90,180,270,360,450\}\,, can be solved for the functions of x, since we know the function values of 5x\,. The multiple angle formulas are:

\sin5x=16\sin^5 x-20\sin^3 x+5\sin x,\,
\cos5x=16\cos^5 x-20\cos^3 x+5\cos x.\,
  • When \sin5x =0\, or \cos5x=0\,, we let y=\sin x\, or y=\cos x\, and solve for y\,:
16y^5-20y^3+5y=0.\,
One solution is zero, and the resulting 4th degree equation can be solved as a quadratic in y^2\,.
  • When \sin5x=1\, or \cos 5x=1\,, we again let y=\sin x\, or y=\cos x\, and solve for y\,:
16y^5-20y^3+5y-1=0,\,
which factors into:
(y-1)(4y^2+2y-1)^2=0.\,

n × π/20

9° is 45 − 36, and 27° is 45 − 18; so we use the subtraction formulas for sine and cosine.

n × π/30

6° is 36 − 30, 12° is 30 − 18, 24° is 54 − 30, and 42° is 60 − 18; so we use the subtraction formulas for sine and cosine.

n × π/60

3° is 18 − 15, 21° is 36 − 15, 33° is 18 + 15, and 39° is 54 − 15, so we use the subtraction (or addition) formulas for sine and cosine.

Strategies for simplifying expressions

Rationalize the denominator

If the denominator is a square root, multiply the numerator and denominator by that radical.
If the denominator is the sum or difference of two terms, multiply the numerator and denominator by the conjugate of the denominator. The conjugate is the identical, except the sign between the terms is changed.
Sometimes you need to rationalize the denominator more than once.

Split a fraction in two

Sometimes it helps to split the fraction into the sum of two fractions and then simplify both separately.

Squaring and square rooting

If there is a complicated term, with only one kind of radical in a term, this plan may help. Square the term, combine like terms, and take the square root. This may leave a big radical with a smaller radical inside, but it is often better than the original.

Simplification of nested radical expressions

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In general nested radicals cannot be reduced.

But if for \sqrt{a\pm b\sqrt c}\, with a, b, and c rational we have that

R=\sqrt{a^2-b^2c}\,

is rational, then both

d=\frac{a + R}{2}\text{ and }e=\frac{a - R}{2}\,

are rational; then we have

\sqrt{a\pm b\sqrt c}=\sqrt{d}\pm\sqrt{e}. \,

For example,

4\sin18^\circ=\sqrt{6-2\sqrt5}=\sqrt5-1. \,
4\sin15^\circ=2\sqrt{2-\sqrt{3}}=\sqrt{2}(\sqrt{3}-1).

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Bradie, Brian. "Exact values for the sine and cosine of multiples of 18°—A geometric approach", The College Mathematics Journal 33, September 2002, 318–319.

External links