Trig ratios in a right angled triangle resources
Guides (1)
Just the Maths (A.J.Hobson)
"Just the Maths" authored by the late Tony Hobson, former Senior
Lecturer in Mathematics of the School of Mathematical and
Information Sciences at Coventry University, is a collection of separate mathematics units, in chronological
topic-order, intended for foundation level and first year
degree level in higher education where mathematics is a service discipline e.g. engineering.
Quick Reference (1)
The trigonometrical ratios
This leaflet defines sine, cosine and tangent of angles in a right-angled triangle and gives some standard ratios. (Engineering Maths First Aid Kit 4.2)
Teach Yourself (1)
Trigonometrical ratios in a right angled triangle
This unit introduces the ratios sine, cosine and tangent, with reference to a right angled triangle.
Test Yourself (1)
Maths EG
Computer-aided assessment of maths, stats and numeracy from GCSE to undergraduate level 2. These resources have been made available under a Creative Common licence by Martin Greenhow and Abdulrahman Kamavi, Brunel University.
Video (2)
Trig ratios in a right angled triangle
Knowledge of the trigonometric ratios of sine, cosine and tangent is vital in very many fields of engineering, science and maths. This unit introduces them and provides examples of how they can be used to solve problems. (Mathtutor Video Tutorial)
This resource is released under a Creative Commons license Attribution-Non-Commercial-No Derivative Works and the copyright is held by Skillbank Solutions Ltd.
Trigonometric ratios of an angle of any size - an Animation
This mathtutor animation shows how graphs of sin, cos and tan may be plotted as angles increase in positive and negative directions. This resource is released under a Creative Commons license Attribution-Non-Commercial-No Derivative Works and the copyright is held by Skillbank Solutions Ltd.
Video with captions which require edits (1)
Trig ratios in a right angled triangle
Knowledge of the trigonometric ratios of sine, cosine and tangent is vital in very many fields of engineering, science and maths. This unit introduces them and provides examples of how they can be used to solve problems. (Mathtutor Video Tutorial)
The video is released under a Creative Commons license Attribution-Non-Commercial-No Derivative Works and the copyright is held by Skillbank Solutions Ltd.