Starter track
Step 4 of 60 / 6 completeComplex and Parametric Motion
Earlier steps still set up Trig Identities from Unit-Circle Geometry.
Previous step: Polar Coordinates / Radius and Angle.
Concept module
Keep one rotating point and its projections visible so the core trig identities stay tied to geometry instead of detached symbol rules.
Interactive lab
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Progress
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Stable links
Starter track
Step 4 of 60 / 6 completeEarlier steps still set up Trig Identities from Unit-Circle Geometry.
Previous step: Polar Coordinates / Radius and Angle.
Why it behaves this way
Trig identities land more honestly when they stay on the same unit-circle bench as the rotating point. This page keeps the point, its projections, and a squared-projection graph visible together so the identities come from geometry instead of looking like detached symbol tricks.
On the unit circle the radius is always 1, so every live point satisfies x^2 + y^2 = 1. Once the same point is read as (cos theta, sin theta), the Pythagorean identity is forced by the picture. Complementary-angle swaps are geometric too: in the first quadrant, swapping the horizontal and vertical shadows swaps cosine and sine.
Key ideas
Frozen walkthrough
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View plans53.1 °
1. Read the live projections
2. Square the same two projections
3. Add the squared pieces
Identity check
Common misconception
Trig identities are mostly symbolic algebra, so the unit-circle picture is optional once the formulas are memorized.
The identities come from the same geometry as the live projections.
If the point stays on the unit circle, the squared projections must still add to 1 even when the raw signs change.
Mini challenge
Make a prediction before you reveal the next step.
Check your reasoning against the live bench.
Quick test
Misconception check
Question 1 of 2
Use the live bench to test the result before moving on.
Accessibility
The simulation shows a unit circle with one rotating point, horizontal and vertical projection guides, an angle marker, a quadrant sign map, and graphs that compare the raw projections with their squared values.
Graph summary
One graph shows cosine and sine changing over time, and a second graph shows cosine squared, sine squared, and their sum staying fixed at 1.
Read next
Open the next concept, route, or track only when you want the current model to widen into a larger branch.
Keep one polar point and its coordinate signs visible so inverse trig becomes angle-from-ratio reasoning with quadrant checks instead of a calculator-only output.
Keep x(t), y(t), the traced path, and the moving point visible together so shape and traversal stay distinct.
Slide a point along one curve, tighten a secant into a tangent, and connect local steepness to the derivative graph without leaving the same live bench.