Law of tangents

Template:Trigonometry In trigonometry, the law of tangents or tangent rule[1] is a statement about the relationship between the tangents of two angles of a triangle and the lengths of the opposing sides.
In Figure 1, Template:Math, Template:Math, and Template:Math are the lengths of the three sides of the triangle, and Template:Math, Template:Math, and Template:Math are the angles opposite those three respective sides. The law of tangents states that
The law of tangents, although not as commonly known as the law of sines or the law of cosines, is equivalent to the law of sines, and can be used in any case where two sides and the included angle, or two angles and a side, are known.
Proof
To prove the law of tangents one can start with the law of sines:
where Template:Tmath is the diameter of the circumcircle, so that Template:Tmath and Template:Tmath.
It follows that
Using the trigonometric identity, the factor formula for sines specifically
we get
As an alternative to using the identity for the sum or difference of two sines, one may cite the trigonometric identity
(see tangent half-angle formula).
Application
The law of tangents can be used to compute the angles of a triangle in which two sides Template:Math and Template:Math and the enclosed angle Template:Math are given.
From
compute the angle difference Template:Math; use that to calculate Template:Math and then Template:Math.
Once an angle opposite a known side is computed, the remaining side Template:Math can be computed using the law of sines.
In the time before electronic calculators were available, this method was preferable to an application of the law of cosines Template:Math, as this latter law necessitated an additional lookup in a logarithm table, in order to compute the square root. In modern times the law of tangents may have better numerical properties than the law of cosines: If Template:Math is small, and Template:Math and Template:Math are almost equal, then an application of the law of cosines leads to a subtraction of almost equal values, incurring catastrophic cancellation.
Spherical version
On a sphere of unit radius, the sides of the triangle are arcs of great circles. Accordingly, their lengths can be expressed in radians or any other units of angular measure. Let Template:Math, Template:Math, Template:Math be the angles at the three vertices of the triangle and let Template:Math, Template:Math, Template:Math be the respective lengths of the opposite sides. The spherical law of tangents says[2]
History
The law of tangents was discovered by Arab mathematician Abu al-Wafa in the 10th century.[3]
Ibn Muʿādh al-Jayyānī also described the law of tangents for planar triangles in the 11th century.[4]
The law of tangents for spherical triangles was described in the 13th century by Persian mathematician Nasir al-Din al-Tusi (1201–1274), who also presented the law of sines for plane triangles in his five-volume work Treatise on the Quadrilateral.[4][5]
Cyclic quadrilateral
A generalization of the law of tangents holds for a cyclic quadrilateral Denote the lengths of sides and and angle measures .Then:[6]
This formula reduces to the law of tangents for a triangle when .
See also
- Law of sines
- Law of cosines
- Law of cotangents
- Mollweide's formula
- Half-side formula
- Tangent half-angle formula
Notes
- ↑ See Eli Maor, Trigonometric Delights, Princeton University Press, 2002.
- ↑ Daniel Zwillinger, CRC Standard Mathematical Tables and Formulae, 32nd Edition, CRC Press, 2011, page 219.
- ↑ Template:Cite book
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Template:Cite book
- ↑ Template:Cite book
- ↑ Template:Citation