Statement
Certain trigonometric ratios take especially simple values when the angles are 30°, 45°, or 60°. These “special trig values” are often required in GCSE exams, both for non-calculator questions and to simplify exact answers.
\[
\sin 45^\circ = \cos 45^\circ = \tfrac{\sqrt{2}}{2}, \quad
\sin 30^\circ = \tfrac{1}{2}, \quad
\cos 30^\circ = \tfrac{\sqrt{3}}{2}, \quad
\sin 60^\circ = \tfrac{\sqrt{3}}{2}, \quad
\cos 60^\circ = \tfrac{1}{2}
\]
Why it’s true
- These values come from geometry, not memorisation alone. By constructing special right-angled triangles, we can derive them.
- A 45°–45°–90° triangle (isosceles right triangle) shows that both legs are equal, giving sine and cosine of 45° equal to \( \frac{\sqrt{2}}{2} \).
- An equilateral triangle cut in half gives 30°–60°–90° triangles. Using Pythagoras, we derive the ratios for sine and cosine of 30° and 60°.
Recipe (how to use it)
- Identify if the question uses one of the angles 30°, 45°, or 60°.
- Recall or reconstruct the special triangle to write down the exact value.
- Use the value in calculations, simplifying surds when necessary.
Spotting it
Look for exam questions with exact angles such as 30°, 45°, or 60°. Calculator questions usually give decimals, but “exact value” questions want you to use these special ratios.
Common pairings
- Exact trig values appear in Pythagoras-style or surd simplification questions.
- They often pair with trigonometric identities, such as \(\sin^2\theta + \cos^2\theta = 1\).
- Geometry questions involving equilateral or isosceles right-angled triangles.
Mini examples
- Given: Find \(\sin 30^\circ\). Answer: \(\tfrac{1}{2}\).
- Given: Simplify \(\cos 60^\circ \times 4\). Answer: \(2\).
Pitfalls
- Confusing sine and cosine values for 30° and 60°.
- Forgetting that the values must remain in surd form (e.g. writing 0.707 instead of \(\tfrac{\sqrt{2}}{2}\)).
- Using a calculator when the question says “exact value”.
- Dropping the denominator when simplifying surds.
Exam strategy
- Memorise the triangles or the values; both methods are valid.
- Check if the exam requires an exact answer. Never approximate unless asked.
- Write fractions clearly, with surds simplified when possible.
Summary
The special trig values for 30°, 45°, and 60° give exact surd results instead of decimals. They are crucial in non-calculator exams, algebraic trigonometry, and proofs. Remembering them saves time and prevents mistakes when working with exact trigonometric expressions.