Intermediate

Pythagoras and Trigonometry

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·Edexcel GCSE Mathematics·Pearson Edexcel 1MA1·6 min
G20·G21·G22·G23

Pythagoras' Theorem (G20)

In a right-angled triangle with legs , and hypotenuse :

The hypotenuse is the longest side, opposite the right angle.

Finding the hypotenuse:

Worked example: , . cm ✓

Finding a shorter side:

Worked example: , . cm ✓

3D Pythagoras (Higher): apply the theorem twice — first in a horizontal or vertical plane, then use that result as a side in a second triangle.

Worked example — find the length of the space diagonal of a cuboid cm.

Base diagonal: . Space diagonal: cm ✓

Trigonometric Ratios — SOH CAH TOA (G20)

For an acute angle in a right-angled triangle:

Finding a side: multiply or divide as appropriate.

Worked example — in a right-angled triangle, , hypotenuse cm. Find the side opposite .

cm ✓

Finding an angle: use the inverse trig function.

Worked example — opposite cm, adjacent cm. Find .

Setting up: correctly identify which sides are opposite, adjacent, and hypotenuse relative to the angle you are working with — not relative to some other angle in the triangle.

Exact Trigonometric Values (G21)

These exact values must be memorised — they are not given on the exam formula sheet:

undefined

Memory aid: for , the values come from .

Worked example — find the exact area of an isosceles right-angled triangle with equal sides 6 cm.

cm². Hypotenuse cm. ✓

Sine Rule and Cosine Rule (G22 Higher)

Use non-right-angled triangle rules when no right angle is present.

Sine rule (use when given two angles + one side, or two sides + an angle not between them):

Worked example — in triangle : , , cm. Find .

. cm ✓

Cosine rule (use when given two sides + the included angle, or all three sides to find an angle):

Rearranged to find angle:

Worked example, , . Find .

cm ✓

How much of this have you taken in?

Quiz yourself on this section — free, no card needed.

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Area Formula ½ab sin C (G23 Higher)

For any triangle with two sides and and the included angle :

This formula applies to any triangle — not just right-angled ones.

Worked example — triangle with sides 8 cm and 11 cm and included angle :

cm² ✓

Worked example — find angle if the area is 30 cm², and , :

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Opposite and adjacent — wrong identification

The "opposite" and "adjacent" labels are relative to the angle in question, not to any fixed position. Redraw the triangle and label before assigning sides.

2. Sine rule — ambiguous case

The sine rule can give two possible triangles (acute and obtuse angles with the same sine). If two sides and a non-included angle are given and but , check whether also makes sense.

3. Cosine rule — sign error on the final term

: when , is negative, so the term becomes positive. Missing this makes the triangle shorter than it should be.

4. Exact values — confusing sin and cos for 30° and 60°

, ; these swap for 60°. A quick check: because 60° is closer to 90° (the maximum).

MistakeCorrection
"";
"Cosine rule: " (both and are added)
"Area = for any triangle, using a slant side as " must be the perpendicular height; use when the perpendicular height is unknown

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