- Unit circle
In
mathematics , a unit circle is acircle with a unitradius , i.e., a circle whose radius is 1. Frequently, especially intrigonometry , "the" unit circle is the circle of radius 1 centered at the origin (0, 0) in theCartesian coordinate system in theEuclidean plane . The unit circle is often denoted "S"1; the generalization to higher dimensions is theunit sphere .If ("x", "y") is a point on the unit circle in the first quadrant, then "x" and "y" are the lengths of the legs of a
right triangle whose hypotenuse has length 1. Thus, by thePythagorean theorem , "x" and "y" satisfy the equation:
Since "x"2 = (−"x")2 for all "x", and since the reflection of any point on the unit circle about the "x"- or "y"-axis is also on the unit circle, the above equation holds for all points ("x", "y") on the unit circle, not just those in the first quadrant.
One may also use other notions of "distance" to define other "unit circles", such as the
Riemannian circle ; see the article on mathematical norms for additional examples.Trigonometric functions on the unit circle
The
trigonometric function s cosine and sine may be defined on the unit circle as follows. If ("x", "y") is a point of the unit circle, and if the ray from the origin (0, 0) to ("x", "y") makes anangle "t" from the positive "x"-axis, (where counterclockwise turning is positive), then::
The equation "x"2 + "y"2 = 1 gives the relation
:Note that cos2(t)=(cos(t))2. This is the standard shorthand for expressing powers of trigonometric functions.
The unit circle also gives an intuitive way of realizing that
sine andcosine areperiodic function s, with the identities: : for any
integer "k".These identities come from the fact that the "x"- and "y"-coordinates of a point on the unit circle remain the same after the angle "t" is increased or decreased by any number of revolutions (1 revolution = 2π radians = 360º).
When working with right triangles, sine, cosine, and other trigonometric functions only make sense for angle measures more than zero and less than π/2. However, using the unit circle, these functions have sensible, intuitive meanings for any real-valued angle measure.
In fact, not only sine and cosine, but all of the six standard trigonometric functions — sine, cosine, tangent, cotangent, secant, and cosecant, as well as archaic functions like
versine andexsecant — can be defined geometrically in terms of a unit circle, as shown at right.Circle group
Complex number s can be identified with points in theEuclidean plane , namely the number "a" + "bi" is identified with the point ("a", "b"). Under this identification, the unit circle is a group under multiplication, called thecircle group . This group has important applications in mathematics and science.ee also
*Angle measure
*Unit square
*Unit disc
*Circle group
*Riemannian circle External links
*
* [http://www.dudefree.com/unitcircle/ An excellent Flash animation for learning the unit circle]
* [http://www.nbritton.org/uploads/unit_circle.pdf Printable, full page, unit circle handout]
* [http://glab.trixon.se/ GonioLab] : Visualization of the unit circle, trigonometric and hyperbolic functions
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