Sine, Cosine, and Tangent Calculator
Enter an angle in degrees or radians to find its sine, cosine, and tangent values using our free Sine, Cosine, and Tangent Calculator.
Calculate Sine, Cosine & Tangent
Visual & Table
| Angle (Degrees) | Angle (Radians) | Sine (sin) | Cosine (cos) | Tangent (tan) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0° | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| 30° | π/6 ≈ 0.5236 | 0.5 | √3/2 ≈ 0.8660 | 1/√3 ≈ 0.5774 |
| 45° | π/4 ≈ 0.7854 | √2/2 ≈ 0.7071 | √2/2 ≈ 0.7071 | 1 |
| 60° | π/3 ≈ 1.0472 | √3/2 ≈ 0.8660 | 0.5 | √3 ≈ 1.7321 |
| 90° | π/2 ≈ 1.5708 | 1 | 0 | Undefined |
| 180° | π ≈ 3.1416 | 0 | -1 | 0 |
| 270° | 3π/2 ≈ 4.7124 | -1 | 0 | Undefined |
| 360° | 2π ≈ 6.2832 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
What is a Sine, Cosine, and Tangent Calculator?
A Sine, Cosine, and Tangent Calculator is a tool used to determine the trigonometric ratios (sine, cosine, and tangent) for a given angle. These ratios are fundamental in trigonometry, relating the angles of a right-angled triangle to the lengths of its sides. You input an angle, specify whether it’s in degrees or radians, and the calculator provides the sin, cos, and tan values.
This calculator is useful for students learning trigonometry, engineers, architects, game developers, and anyone working with angles and their relationships in geometric or wave contexts. It simplifies the process of finding these values, especially for angles that aren’t the standard 0, 30, 45, 60, or 90 degrees.
A common misconception is that these functions only apply to right-angled triangles. While they are defined using right triangles (SOH CAH TOA), their application extends to the unit circle and periodic functions, describing phenomena like waves and oscillations. Our Sine, Cosine, and Tangent Calculator helps visualize this with the unit circle.
Sine, Cosine, and Tangent Formula and Mathematical Explanation
The trigonometric functions sine (sin), cosine (cos), and tangent (tan) are defined based on a right-angled triangle or the unit circle.
For a right-angled triangle with an angle θ (not the 90° angle):
- Sine (sin θ) = Opposite / Hypotenuse
- Cosine (cos θ) = Adjacent / Hypotenuse
- Tangent (tan θ) = Opposite / Adjacent
Where “Opposite” is the length of the side opposite angle θ, “Adjacent” is the length of the side adjacent to angle θ (and not the hypotenuse), and “Hypotenuse” is the length of the side opposite the right angle.
On a unit circle (a circle with radius 1 centered at the origin), if we draw a line from the origin at an angle θ (measured counter-clockwise from the positive x-axis) to intersect the circle at point (x, y), then:
- cos θ = x
- sin θ = y
- tan θ = y / x
Calculators typically use the unit circle definition or series expansions to compute these values, and angles are often converted to radians for calculation, where 180° = π radians.
| Variable | Meaning | Unit | Typical Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| θ (theta) | The angle | Degrees (°), Radians (rad) | 0-360° or 0-2π rad (can be any real number) |
| sin θ | Sine of the angle | Dimensionless ratio | -1 to 1 |
| cos θ | Cosine of the angle | Dimensionless ratio | -1 to 1 |
| tan θ | Tangent of the angle | Dimensionless ratio | -∞ to ∞ (undefined at 90°+180°n) |
Practical Examples (Real-World Use Cases)
Example 1: Finding the height of a tree
You stand 50 meters away from the base of a tree and measure the angle of elevation to the top of the tree as 30 degrees. How tall is the tree?
Here, the distance to the tree is the adjacent side (50m), and the height of the tree is the opposite side. We use the tangent function: tan(30°) = Height / 50m. Using a calculator, tan(30°) ≈ 0.5774. So, Height ≈ 0.5774 * 50 = 28.87 meters.
Using our Sine, Cosine, and Tangent Calculator with an input of 30 degrees, you’d find tan(30) ≈ 0.5774.
Example 2: Navigation
A ship sails 100 km on a bearing of 60 degrees (from North, clockwise). How far east and how far north has it traveled?
The angle with the North direction is 60°. The angle with the East direction (positive x-axis if North is positive y-axis) is 90° – 60° = 30°.
Distance North = 100 * cos(60°) = 100 * 0.5 = 50 km.
Distance East = 100 * sin(60°) = 100 * 0.8660 ≈ 86.6 km.
Alternatively, using the 30° angle from East: Distance East = 100 * cos(30°) ≈ 86.6 km, Distance North = 100 * sin(30°) = 50 km.
How to Use This Sine, Cosine, and Tangent Calculator
- Enter Angle Value: Type the numerical value of the angle into the “Angle Value” field.
- Select Angle Unit: Choose whether the angle you entered is in “Degrees (°)” or “Radians (rad)” from the dropdown menu.
- Calculate: The calculator updates in real-time as you type or change the unit. You can also click the “Calculate” button.
- View Results: The sine, cosine, tangent values, and the angle converted to the other unit will be displayed in the results section. The sine value is highlighted as the primary result.
- Check Visualization: The unit circle chart will update to show the angle and the corresponding x (cos) and y (sin) coordinates.
- Reset: Click “Reset” to clear the inputs and results to default values (30 degrees).
- Copy Results: Click “Copy Results” to copy the angle, unit, sine, cosine, and tangent values to your clipboard.
The Sine, Cosine, and Tangent Calculator provides immediate feedback, making it easy to explore different angles.
Key Factors That Affect Sine, Cosine, and Tangent Results
- Angle Value: The primary determinant. The trigonometric functions are periodic, so sin(θ) = sin(θ + 360°) or sin(θ + 2π rad), and similarly for cosine.
- Angle Unit (Degrees vs. Radians): Using the wrong unit will give drastically different results. Ensure you select the correct unit corresponding to your input angle value. Our Sine, Cosine, and Tangent Calculator allows easy switching.
- Calculator Precision: Most calculators, including this one, use high precision for calculations, but the final displayed result is usually rounded to a few decimal places.
- Quadrant of the Angle: The signs of sine, cosine, and tangent depend on which quadrant (I, II, III, or IV) the angle lies in on the unit circle.
- Proximity to Undefined Points: The tangent function is undefined at 90°, 270°, etc. (π/2, 3π/2 rad). Angles very close to these values will result in very large positive or negative tangent values.
- Rounding: How the results are rounded can slightly affect the last decimal place.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
- What are sine, cosine, and tangent?
- They are the three primary trigonometric functions, ratios of the sides of a right-angled triangle, or coordinates on a unit circle, corresponding to an angle.
- Why is tangent undefined at 90 degrees?
- At 90 degrees (or π/2 radians), on the unit circle, the x-coordinate (cosine) is 0. Since tan(θ) = y/x, division by zero occurs, making the tangent undefined.
- How do I convert degrees to radians?
- Multiply the angle in degrees by π/180. For example, 90° * (π/180) = π/2 radians.
- How do I convert radians to degrees?
- Multiply the angle in radians by 180/π. For example, π radians * (180/π) = 180°.
- Can the sine or cosine of an angle be greater than 1 or less than -1?
- No. For real angles, the sine and cosine values are always between -1 and 1, inclusive, because they represent the x and y coordinates on a unit circle (radius 1).
- What is SOH CAH TOA?
- It’s a mnemonic to remember the definitions: Sine = Opposite/Hypotenuse, Cosine = Adjacent/Hypotenuse, Tangent = Opposite/Adjacent.
- Is this Sine, Cosine, and Tangent Calculator free to use?
- Yes, our calculator is completely free for anyone to use.
- What if I enter a negative angle?
- The calculator will correctly compute the values. sin(-θ) = -sin(θ), cos(-θ) = cos(θ), tan(-θ) = -tan(θ).
Related Tools and Internal Resources
- Trigonometry Basics – Learn the fundamentals of trigonometry.
- Unit Circle Guide – An interactive guide to the unit circle and trigonometric functions.
- Angle Conversion Tool – Convert between degrees, radians, and other angle units.
- Right Triangle Calculator – Solve for sides and angles of a right triangle.
- Advanced Math Tools – Explore more calculators for mathematics.
- Geometry Calculators – Calculators for various geometric shapes and problems.