IB Maths AA SL Topic 3 — Geometry & Trig Paper 1 & 2 ~9 min read

Solving Equations Using Trigonometric Graphs

Your calculator’s sin⁻¹, cos⁻¹, and tan⁻¹ buttons only give you one answer to a trig equation — but most trig equations have many. The graph shows you exactly where the rest are. Sketch, draw a horizontal line, find the others.

📘 What you need to know

Why one calculator answer isn’t enough

Type sin⁻¹(0.5) into your calculator and you’ll get 30°. But sin x = 0.5 has infinitely many solutions: 30°, 150°, 390°, 510°, … and so on going forever in both directions. Your calculator picks just one — the principal value — and ignores the rest. The graph shows you all of them at once.

y = sin x cuts the line y = 0.5 at every solution
x y 1 −1 y = 0.5 90° 180° 270° 360° 30° 150° two solutions in [0°, 360°]
The dashed red line y = 0.5 cuts the sine curve in two places over [0°, 360°]: at 30° and 150°.

How many solutions to expect

Before you start hunting for answers, work out roughly how many solutions you should find. This stops you missing any.

Equation
Solutions per cycle
Cycle length
sin x = k  (−1 < k < 1, k ≠ 0)
2
every 360°
cos x = k  (−1 < k < 1, k ≠ 0)
2
every 360°
tan x = k
1
every 180°
sin/cos x = ±1
1
every 360° (the peak/trough)
sin/cos x = 0
2
every 360° (the zeros)
Quick check: divide the width of your interval by 360° (or 180° for tan). If it’s a whole number, double it for sin/cos to get the exact count. If not, the closest whole numbers give you the minimum and maximum counts.
For example, in [0°, 720°] you’d expect 720 ÷ 360 = 2 full cycles of sin, so 4 solutions for sin x = 0.5. In [0°, 540°] (a 1.5-cycle interval), you’d expect 2 or 3 — the exact number depends on where the interval starts and ends.

The 4-step method

1
SKETCH
Draw the trig graph over the given interval. Check degrees vs radians.
2
DRAW LINE
Add the horizontal line y = k. Solutions are the intersections.
3
PRINCIPAL
Use inverse trig on your calculator to get the first solution.
4
SYMMETRY
Use the graph’s symmetry/periodicity to find all the others.

The symmetry shortcuts

Once you’ve got the principal value, each trig function has its own quick rule for finding the second solution (and beyond):

y = sin x
Symmetric about x = 90°. Repeats every 360°.
If x = α, then 180° − α
also a solution. Add ±360° for more.
y = cos x
Symmetric about x = 0°. Repeats every 360°.
If x = α, then −α
also a solution. Add ±360° for more.
y = tan x
Repeats every 180°.
If x = α, then α + 180°
also a solution. Add ±180° for more.

🤔 Why these specific symmetries?

The sine wave reflects across its peak — so if 30° gives sin = 0.5, then 90° + (90° − 30°) = 150° also gives sin = 0.5. The cosine wave reflects across the y-axis — so if 60° works, so does −60°. Tan doesn’t reflect at all; it just translates by 180° because that’s its period.

🧠 Memory trick — “subtract from 180” or “negate”

For sin: second solution = 180° − principal.
For cos: second solution = −principal (or equivalently 360° − principal).
For tan: second solution = principal + 180°.

Cosine — the symmetry across the y-axis

y = cos x with y = 0.5 — symmetric solutions
x y 1 −1 y = 0.5 −360° −180° 180° 360° −300° −60° 60° 300° 4 solutions in [−360°, 360°]
cos x = 0.5 in [−360°, 360°] has solutions at −300°, −60°, 60°, 300°.

Worked examples

WE 1

Solve a sine equation in [0°, 360°]

Solve sin x = 0.7 for 0° ≤ x ≤ 360°. Give answers to 1 d.p.

Step 1: Find the principal value x = sin⁻¹(0.7) = 44.4° Step 2: Apply the sin symmetry rule Second solution = 180° − 44.4° = 135.6° Step 3: Check both fit the interval Both 44.4° and 135.6° lie in [0°, 360°] ✓ x = 44.4° or 135.6° expected 2 solutions, found 2 — done!
WE 2

Solve a cosine equation in [0°, 360°]

Solve cos x = 0.3 for 0° ≤ x ≤ 360°. Give answers to 1 d.p.

Step 1: Principal value x = cos⁻¹(0.3) = 72.5° Step 2: Cos symmetry — second solution is −72.5° but that’s outside [0°, 360°] Step 3: Add 360° to bring it into range −72.5° + 360° = 287.5° x = 72.5° or 287.5° when the negative version is out of range, add 360°
WE 3

Solve a tangent equation

Solve tan x = 2 for 0° ≤ x ≤ 360°. Give answers to 1 d.p.

Step 1: Principal value x = tan⁻¹(2) = 63.4° Step 2: Apply tan periodicity (every 180°) Next solution = 63.4° + 180° = 243.4° Step 3: Check no others fit 63.4° + 360° = 423.4° (out of range) ✗ x = 63.4° or 243.4° tan only has 1 solution per 180° — so 2 in 360°
WE 4

Cosine equation over a wider interval (SME-style)

One solution to cos x = 0.5 is 60°. Find all the other solutions in the range −360° ≤ x ≤ 360°.

Step 1: Apply cos symmetry Cos is symmetric about x = 0° → if 60° works, so does −60°. Step 2: Apply periodicity (±360°) 60° + 360° = 420° (out of range) 60° − 360° = −300° ✓ −60° + 360° = 300° ✓ −60° − 360° = −420° (out of range) Step 3: List all solutions in [−360°, 360°] x = −300°, −60°, 60°, 300° interval width is 720° = 2 full cycles → expect 4 solutions ✓
WE 5

Solve in radians

Solve sin x = √32 for 0 ≤ x ≤ 2π. Give exact values.

Step 1: Recognise the exact value sin π3 = √32  →  principal value = π3 Step 2: Apply sin symmetry: π − principal Second solution = π − π3 = 3 Step 3: Both inside [0, 2π] ✓ x = π3 or 3 in radians, 180° becomes π — same logic, different units

💡 Top tips

⚠ Common mistakes

Sketching the graph first makes solving trig equations almost automatic. Don’t trust the calculator alone — let the picture confirm how many answers you should have, then use the symmetry rules to nail them down.

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