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Cosine Ratio Calculator

Calculate cos(A) from the adjacent side b and hypotenuse c with clear right-triangle steps.

Calculate Cosine Ratio

Этот калькулятор следует cos(A)=bc\cos(A) = \frac{b}{c} и возвращает cos(A).

Введите данные для расчета cos(A).

How This Cosine Ratio Calculator Works

The cosine ratio measures how the adjacent side of a right triangle compares to the hypotenuse. It is the second part of SOH-CAH-TOA and one of the most commonly used trig functions in geometry, physics, and engineering.

This calculator takes two inputs — the adjacent side b and the hypotenuse c — and returns cos(A). It handles the division for you and shows the result immediately, so you can focus on understanding the geometry instead of the arithmetic.

Type the adjacent side b and hypotenuse c into the input fields above. The calculator computes cos(A) = b / c. Both values must be positive, and c must be larger than b.

Formula

cos(A) = b / c

The cosine of angle A equals the adjacent side divided by the hypotenuse. This is the CAH in SOH-CAH-TOA.

The adjacent side b is the leg that touches angle A and the right angle. The hypotenuse c sits across from the right angle and is always the longest side. Because the hypotenuse is longer than any leg, cos(A) always produces a value between 0 and 1 for acute angles.

Triangle Diagram

A B C a (opp) b (adj) c (hyp) 90°

For angle A, side a is opposite, side b is adjacent, and side c is the hypotenuse.

The cosine ratio uses the adjacent side b (the leg that forms angle A along with the hypotenuse) and the hypotenuse c. Side a is not part of the cosine calculation.

Ratio Highlight

Numerator adjacent side b
Denominator hypotenuse c

The cosine ratio uses the adjacent side b (the leg that forms angle A along with the hypotenuse) and the hypotenuse c. Side a is not part of the cosine calculation.

Side Key

  • a = Opposite (height across from angle A) Not used in cos(A)
  • b = Adjacent (base next to angle A) Used in cos(A)
  • c = Hypotenuse (slanted side) Used in cos(A)

When angle A is small, the adjacent side is nearly as long as the hypotenuse, so cos(A) is close to 1. When angle A is large (near 90°), the adjacent side shrinks relative to the hypotenuse, pushing cos(A) toward 0.

How to Use

  1. Locate angle A in your right triangle. It is one of the two acute angles.
  2. Identify the adjacent side. This is side b: the leg that forms angle A together with the hypotenuse.
  3. Identify the hypotenuse c, the side opposite the 90° angle.
  4. Enter the value of b in the first field.
  5. Enter the value of c in the second field.
  6. Press Calculate to see cos(A).
  7. Check that the result is between 0 and 1.

Step-by-Step Example

A right triangle has adjacent side b = 4 and hypotenuse c = 5.

cos(A) = b / c
cos(A) = 4 / 5
cos(A) = 0.8

Cosine of angle A is 0.8. The adjacent side is 80% of the hypotenuse length. To find the angle: A = arccos(0.8) ≈ 36.87°.

What the Result Means

Cosine tells you how much of the hypotenuse length is covered by the adjacent side. A cosine of 0.8 means the adjacent side stretches 80% as far as the hypotenuse does.

When angle A is small, the adjacent side is nearly as long as the hypotenuse, so cos(A) is close to 1. When angle A is large (near 90°), the adjacent side shrinks relative to the hypotenuse, pushing cos(A) toward 0.

The result is dimensionless. It does not matter whether your measurements are in feet, meters, or any other unit — cosine is a pure ratio.

When to Use This Ratio

Reach for this cosine ratio calculator when:

Common Mistakes

These are the most frequent cosine errors students make:

help

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to the most common right-triangle solving questions.

01 What is the cosine ratio formula for a right triangle? expand_more

It is cos(A) = b / c, where b is the adjacent side and c is the hypotenuse. Adjacent means the leg that touches angle A.

02 How is cosine different from sine? expand_more

Sine uses the opposite side over the hypotenuse (a / c). Cosine uses the adjacent side over the hypotenuse (b / c). They measure different sides relative to the same angle.

03 What does it mean if cos(A) = 0.5? expand_more

It means the adjacent side is exactly half the hypotenuse. This happens when angle A is 60°.

04 Can cosine be greater than 1? expand_more

No. In a right triangle, the hypotenuse is always longer than the adjacent side, so b / c is always less than 1.

05 Why do I only need two sides for cosine? expand_more

The cosine formula only involves the adjacent side and the hypotenuse. The opposite side is not part of the calculation.

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