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Unit circle

From AoPSWiki

A unit circle is a circle whose radius has length 1.

In the Cartesian coordinate system, an equation of the form (x-h)^2+(y-k)^2=1 defines a unit circle with center (h,k).

Trigonometry

An unit circle centered at the origin can be used to calculate values for the basic trigonometric functions. Suppose we draw a ray starting from the origin and meeting the positive x-axis with an angle of \theta. If we drop a perpendicular from the point of intersection between the ray and the circle, we have a right triangle with hypotenuse of 1.

Using the definitions \sin x = \frac{\text{opposite}}{\text{hypotenuse}} and \cos x = \frac{\text{near}}{\text{hypotenuse}}, we find that \sin \theta = \frac{y}{1} = y and \cos \theta = \frac{x}{1} = x.

We can read off values for sine and cosine of an angle this way; we can draw the angle and approximate the x and y coordinates of the intersection.

We can also prove one of he fundamental theorems of trigonometry: \sin^2{\theta}+\cos^2{\theta}=1. The proof is as follows:


We see that the length and width of the triangle in the diagram at left are \sin{\theta} and \cos{\theta}, respectively. We use the pythagorean theorem to get:

\sin^2{\theta}+\cos^2{\theta}=1

Complex numbers

On the complex plane, all solutions to the polynomial x^n = 1 lie upon the unit circle. These are referred to as the roots of unity.

In polar form, the solution to this polynomial can be expressed as \cos \left(\frac{2\pi k}{n}\right) + i\sin \left(\frac{2\pi k}{n}\right), where k = 0,1,2,\ldots n-1. This is commonly written as \mathrm{cis} \left(\frac{2\pi k}{n}\right). Additionally, the solution points form a regular n-gon on the unit circle.

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