IB Maths AA HL
Topic 3 — Geometry & Trigonometry
Paper 1 & 2
~6 min read
Exact Values
For certain “nice” angles — 0°, 30°, 45°, 60°, 90° and their multiples — sin, cos, and tan can be written exactly using fractions and surds, instead of decimal approximations. Memorise the small table once, and use unit-circle symmetries to handle every other multiple.
📘 What you need to know
- Memorise exact values for 0°, 30°, 45°, 60°, 90°, 180° (and 0, π/6, π/4, π/3, π/2, π in radians).
- Two source triangles: a 30°-60°-90° (from a split equilateral) and a 45°-45°-90° (right isosceles).
- For other multiples of 30° or 45°, use the unit-circle symmetries from the previous note: 180° − θ, 180° + θ, 360° − θ.
- tan 90° is undefined (vertical line — division by 0).
- Exact form = surds and fractions; calculator decimals lose precision.
- Sketch the triangles in your exam if you forget — re-derive in 30 seconds rather than guess.
The exact values table
| Angle | 0° | 30° (π/6) | 45° (π/4) | 60° (π/3) | 90° (π/2) | 180° (π) |
|---|
| sin | 0 | 1/2 | 1/√2 | √3/2 | 1 | 0 |
| cos | 1 | √3/2 | 1/√2 | 1/2 | 0 | −1 |
| tan | 0 | 1/√3 | 1 | √3 | undefined | 0 |
Quick pattern: sin goes 0, 1/2, 1/√2, √3/2, 1 — increasing. Cos is the reverse. Tan = sin/cos.
The two special triangles
30°-60°-90°
sides 1, √3, 2
half of an equilateral triangle (side 2)
45°-45°-90°
sides 1, 1, √2
right-isosceles triangle (legs 1)
From the 30-60-90: sin 30° = 1/2, cos 30° = √3/2, tan 30° = 1/√3. From the 45-45-90: sin 45° = cos 45° = 1/√2, tan 45° = 1.
Extending to other multiples
For multiples of 30° or 45° outside the table, write the angle as 180° ± θ or 360° − θ for an acute θ, then apply the symmetry rule and the CAST quadrant signs.
Examples
sin 150° = sin(180° − 30°) = +sin 30° = 1/2
cos 210° = cos(180° + 30°) = −cos 30° = −√3/2
tan 315° = tan(360° − 45°) = −tan 45° = −1
🧭 Recipe — finding exact trig values
- Reduce the angle to within 0° – 360° by adding/subtracting 360°.
- Identify the quadrant using CAST. This tells you the sign.
- Find the related acute angle: 180° − θ in Q2, θ − 180° in Q3, 360° − θ in Q4.
- Look up the acute trig value from the table (or derive from a sketch).
- Apply the sign from CAST. Done.
Worked examples
WE 1Direct lookup from the table
Find the exact value of sin 60° + cos 30°.
Step 1: Read both values from the table
sin 60° = √3/2
cos 30° = √3/2
Step 2: Add
√3/2 + √3/2 = 2(√3/2) = √3
sin 60° + cos 30° = √3
sin 60° = cos 30° because sin θ = cos(90° − θ) — co-function identity
WE 2Exact values for an angle in Q2
Find the exact values of sin 150° and cos 150°.
Step 1: Identify the quadrant
150° is in Q2 (90° < 150° < 180°)
CAST: only sin is positive
Step 2: Write 150° = 180° − 30° and apply symmetries
sin 150° = sin(180° − 30°) = +sin 30° = 1/2
cos 150° = cos(180° − 30°) = −cos 30° = −√3/2
sin 150° = 1/2; cos 150° = −√3/2
WE 3Exact value of tan in Q3
Find the exact value of tan 225°.
Step 1: Identify the quadrant
225° is in Q3 (180° < 225° < 270°)
CAST: tan is positive in Q3
Step 2: Write 225° = 180° + 45° and apply symmetry
tan 225° = tan(180° + 45°) = +tan 45°
tan 45° = 1
tan 225° = 1
in Q3 both sin and cos are negative, so tan = sin/cos = (negative)/(negative) = positive
Find the exact value of cos 330°.
Step 1: Identify the quadrant
330° is in Q4 (270° < 330° < 360°)
CAST: cos is positive in Q4
Step 2: Write 330° = 360° − 30° and apply symmetry
cos 330° = cos(360° − 30°) = +cos 30° = √3/2
cos 330° = √3/2
WE 5Exact value in radians — combined sum
Find the exact value of sin(5π/4) + cos(5π/4).
Step 1: Convert to degrees (or work in radians directly)
5π/4 = 225° → Q3
CAST: only tan is positive in Q3 → sin and cos both negative
Step 2: Use the symmetry 5π/4 = π + π/4
sin(5π/4) = −sin(π/4) = −1/√2
cos(5π/4) = −cos(π/4) = −1/√2
Step 3: Add
−1/√2 + (−1/√2) = −2/√2 = −√2
sin(5π/4) + cos(5π/4) = −√2
2/√2 simplifies: multiply numerator and denominator by √2 → 2√2/2 = √2
WE 6Derive exact values from a 45°-45°-90° triangle
Using a right-isosceles triangle with legs of length 1, derive the exact values of sin 45°, cos 45°, and tan 45°.
Step 1: Sketch — right triangle with two legs = 1 and the right angle between them
the other two angles are equal → both = 45°
Step 2: Apply Pythagoras for the hypotenuse
hyp² = 1² + 1² = 2
hyp = √2
Step 3: Apply SOH CAH TOA for the 45° angle
sin 45° = O/H = 1/√2
cos 45° = A/H = 1/√2
tan 45° = O/A = 1/1 = 1
sin 45° = cos 45° = 1/√2; tan 45° = 1
1/√2 can also be written √2/2 (rationalised denominator) — both are correct exact forms
💡 Top tips
- Sketch the two triangles at the start of every Paper 1 question. Re-derive sin, cos, tan in 30 seconds rather than guessing.
- CAST tells the sign; the table tells the magnitude. Together they handle any angle.
- 1/√2 = √2/2 — both are accepted. Most exam mark schemes prefer the rationalised form (√2/2) but won’t penalise either.
- “Exact” means surds, not decimals. 1/2 ✓, 0.5 ✗ (in exact-form questions).
- For radians, the same table applies: π/6, π/4, π/3, π/2, π, 2π. Convert mentally if needed.
⚠ Common mistakes
- Confusing sin 30° and cos 30°. sin 30° = 1/2; cos 30° = √3/2. The “smaller” value belongs to the smaller angle for sin, larger angle for cos.
- Wrong sign for the quadrant. CAST is non-negotiable — always check.
- Writing decimals instead of exact form. 0.866 ≠ √3/2 in an exact-value question.
- Forgetting tan 90° is undefined. Don’t write 1 or “infinity” — write “undefined” (or note that the cosine is 0).
- Using the wrong triangle. 30-60-90 for 30° and 60°; 45-45-90 for 45°. Mixing them up gives wrong values.
That closes the unit-circle foundations. The next section moves into Trigonometric Functions & Graphs — plotting sin, cos, tan as functions of x, then transforming and modelling them. The exact values from this note will keep coming up — they’re the labelled points on every trig graph you’ll draw from now on.
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