Lesson 60: The Unit Circle II: Sine and Cosine as Coordinates

The Definition of Everything

On the unit circle (where radius \(r=1\)), the trig ratios become incredibly simple. For any point \((x, y)\) on the circle at an angle \(\theta\):

The coordinate of every point is just \((\cos\theta, \sin\theta)\).

Signs in Quadrants (ASTC)

How to remember where sin/cos/tan are positive:

Worked Examples

Example 1: Evaluating at Quadrant Angles

Find \(\sin(180^\circ)\) and \(\cos(180^\circ)\).

Example 2: Using Reference Angles

Find \(\sin(210^\circ)\).

The Bridge to Quantum Mechanics

In Quantum Mechanics, we use the Unit Circle to represent the Probability Amplitude. The "length" of the vector is always 1 (normalization), but its direction (the angle \(\theta\)) determines how it interacts with other waves. This is the origin of the "Wavefunction" being a complex number: we use the x-axis for the "Real" part and the y-axis for the "Imaginary" part. Every particle in the universe is essentially a point moving around this circle.