IB Maths AA SL Topic 3 — Geometry & Trig Paper 1 (no GDC) ~9 min read

Exact Values

For a handful of “special” angles — 0°, 30°, 45°, 60°, 90° (and their multiples) — the values of sin, cos, and tan can be written exactly using simple fractions and surds. These come up constantly on Paper 1 (no GDC), so memorising them earns easy marks.

📘 What you need to know

The exact values table

This is the table to memorise. It’s worth getting it tattooed on the inside of your eyelids — it shows up almost every Paper 1.

Degrees
30°
45°
60°
90°
180°
360°
Radians
0
π6
π4
π3
π2
π
sin
0
12
√22
√32
1
0
0
cos
1
√32
√22
12
0
−1
1
tan
0
1√3
1
√3
undef.
0
0
Why is tan 90° undefined? Because tan θ = sin θ / cos θ, and at 90° you have cos 90° = 0. Dividing by zero is undefined — so tan 90° has no value.

🧠 Memory trick — the sine pattern

For 0°, 30°, 45°, 60°, 90°, the sine values follow a beautiful pattern: √02, √12, √22, √32, √42 — that’s 0, ½, √2/2, √3/2, 1. Cosine is the same pattern in reverse. Once you spot this, the table is much easier to remember.

Where do these values come from? — the two special triangles

You don’t have to memorise the table blindly. The exact values come from two very simple triangles you can sketch in seconds. Once you’ve drawn them, just apply SOH CAH TOA.

🔺 The 30°-60°-90° triangle

1 √3 2 60° 30°

How to derive it: start with an equilateral triangle, side length 2. Drop a perpendicular from one vertex — it splits the triangle into two identical 30°-60°-90° triangles, each with sides 1, √3, 2.

sin 30°12
cos 30°√32
tan 30°1√3
sin 60°√32
cos 60°12
tan 60°√3

🔺 The 45°-45°-90° triangle

1 1 √2 45° 45°

How to derive it: start with an isosceles right-angled triangle where the two short sides each have length 1. By Pythagoras, the hypotenuse is √2. Both non-right angles must be 45°.

sin 45°1√2
cos 45°1√2
tan 45°1

🤔 Why “√2/2″ instead of “1/√2“?

Both are mathematically the same value, but in IB you usually want the denominator rationalised (no surds on the bottom). Multiply top and bottom by √2: 1√2 = √22. Same for tan 30°: 1√3 = √33. Calculator answers will usually give you the rationalised form — match it!

Exact values for any multiple of 30° or 45°

The unit circle’s symmetries let you find exact values for angles like 120°, 210°, 315°, etc. — and even angles bigger than 360° or negative angles. The trick: rewrite the angle as 180 ± θ or 360 ± θ where θ is a known angle.

🔍 The 4-step method

  1. Rewrite your angle as 180 − θ, 180 + θ, 360 − θ, or 360 + θ where θ is an acute angle from the table.
  2. Identify which quadrant your original angle lives in.
  3. Use CAST to determine the sign (positive or negative).
  4. Apply the symmetry rule, then read the magnitude off the table.
Example: sin 315° 315° = 360° − 45°  →  sin 315° = −sin 45° = −√22
Example: cos 210° 210° = 180° + 30°  →  cos 210° = −cos 30° = −√32
Example: tan 420° 420° = 360° + 60°  →  tan 420° = tan 60° = √3
For angles bigger than 360°, just subtract 360° as many times as needed until you land in [0°, 360°]. For negative angles, sin(−θ) = −sin θ, cos(−θ) = cos θ, tan(−θ) = −tan θ.

Worked examples

WE 1

Derive exact values from an equilateral triangle (SME-style)

Using an equilateral triangle of side length 2 units, derive the exact values for sin, cos, and tan of π6 and π3.

Step 1: Split the equilateral triangle in half Drop a perpendicular from the apex. You now have a right-angled triangle with hypotenuse 2 and base 1. Step 2: Find the third side using Pythagoras a2 = 22 − 12 = 4 − 1 = 3 a = √3 Step 3: Apply SOH CAH TOA sin π6 = 12  |  cos π6 = √32  |  tan π6 = 1√3 sin π3 = √32  |  cos π3 = 12  |  tan π3 = √3 All six exact values derived ✓ always start by sketching the triangle — it’s faster than memorising
WE 2

Find sin 150° as an exact value

Find the exact value of sin 150°.

Step 1: Rewrite 150° using a known angle 150° = 180° − 30° Step 2: Identify the quadrant 150° is in quadrant 2. CAST → only sin is positive there. So sin 150° is positive. Step 3: Apply the symmetry sin(180 − θ) = sin θ sin 150° = sin(180 − 30) = sin 30° = 12 sin 150° = 12 positive sign + size from table = exact answer
WE 3

Find cos 225° as an exact value

Find the exact value of cos 225°.

Step 1: Rewrite using a known angle 225° = 180° + 45° Step 2: Identify the quadrant 225° is in quadrant 3. CAST → only tan positive. So cos 225° is negative. Step 3: Apply cos(180 + θ) = −cos θ cos 225° = −cos 45° = −√22 cos 225° = −√22
WE 4

Exact value in radians: tan(5π/6)

Find the exact value of tan 6.

Step 1: Convert / rewrite 6 = π − π6  (equivalent to 180° − 30° = 150°) Step 2: Identify the quadrant 150° → quadrant 2. CAST → only sin positive. So tan is negative. Step 3: Apply tan(π − θ) = −tan θ tan 6 = −tan π6 = −1√3 tan 6 = −1√3   (or −√33 rationalised)
WE 5

Solve a trig equation using exact values

Solve cos θ = −12 for 0° ≤ θ ≤ 360°.

Step 1: Find the reference angle From the table, cos 60° = 12. So the reference angle is 60°. Step 2: Identify quadrants where cos is negative Cos is negative in Q2 and Q3 (CAST: not A, not C). Step 3: Find both solutions Q2: 180 − 60 = 120° Q3: 180 + 60 = 240° θ = 120° or 240° exact values + CAST = no calculator needed!

💡 Top tips

⚠ Common mistakes

Exact values are pure muscle memory — once you’ve drawn the two special triangles a dozen times, they become automatic. Combined with the unit circle and CAST, you can find the exact value of sin, cos, or tan for any multiple of 30° or 45° in seconds, without a calculator.

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