Focused Calculator
Sine Ratio Calculator
Find sin(A) from the opposite side a and hypotenuse c in a right triangle.
Calculate Sine Ratio
This calculator finds sin(A) using .
Enter inputs to calculate sin(A).
sin(A)
Result-
Solution Steps
Formula:
How This Sine Ratio Calculator Works
The sine ratio is one of the first trigonometric functions you learn in geometry. It connects a specific angle in a right triangle to two of its sides — the opposite side and the hypotenuse. If you know these two measurements, this calculator gives you sin(A) instantly.
Whether you are working through a homework problem, checking an exam-style answer, or solving a real measurement task, this tool removes the manual division step. Enter your values and get the result with the formula shown.
Enter the length of the opposite side a and the hypotenuse c into the fields above. The calculator divides a by c and returns sin(A). Both values must be positive, and c must be larger than a.
Formula
The sine of angle A equals the length of the opposite side divided by the length of the hypotenuse. This is often remembered with the SOH part of SOH-CAH-TOA.
In a right triangle, the opposite side is the one directly across from angle A. The hypotenuse is always the longest side — the one facing the 90° angle. Since the hypotenuse is always longer than any leg, sin(A) always falls between 0 and 1 for acute angles.
Triangle Diagram
For angle A, side a is opposite, side b is adjacent, and side c is the hypotenuse.
The sine ratio only uses two of these three sides: the opposite side a (directly across from angle A) and the hypotenuse c (the longest side, opposite the right angle at B).
Ratio Highlight
The sine ratio only uses two of these three sides: the opposite side a (directly across from angle A) and the hypotenuse c (the longest side, opposite the right angle at B).
Side Key
- a = Opposite (height across from angle A) Used in sin(A)
- b = Adjacent (base next to angle A) Not used in sin(A)
- c = Hypotenuse (slanted side) Used in sin(A)
Small values (close to 0) mean angle A is small and the opposite side is short relative to the hypotenuse. Values closer to 1 mean angle A is large (approaching 90°) and the opposite side is nearly as long as the hypotenuse.
How to Use
- Identify angle A in your right triangle. It must be one of the two acute angles, not the 90° angle.
- Find the side opposite angle A. This is side a.
- Find the hypotenuse. This is side c, the longest side, opposite the right angle.
- Enter the value of a in the first input field.
- Enter the value of c in the second input field.
- Click Calculate to see sin(A).
- Review the result. It should be a decimal between 0 and 1.
Step-by-Step Example
Suppose you have a right triangle where the opposite side a = 3 and the hypotenuse c = 5.
The sine of angle A is 0.6. This means the opposite side is 60% of the hypotenuse length. If you need the actual angle, take the inverse sine: A = arcsin(0.6) ≈ 36.87°.
What the Result Means
The output is a unitless ratio. It tells you how the opposite side compares to the hypotenuse in size. A result of 0.5 means the opposite side is exactly half the hypotenuse — which happens in a 30-60-90 triangle where A = 30°.
Small values (close to 0) mean angle A is small and the opposite side is short relative to the hypotenuse. Values closer to 1 mean angle A is large (approaching 90°) and the opposite side is nearly as long as the hypotenuse.
Since sin(A) is a ratio of two lengths, it has no units. Whether your triangle is measured in centimeters, inches, or meters, the sine value stays the same as long as both sides use the same unit.
When to Use This Ratio
Use this sine ratio calculator in any of these situations:
- You know the opposite side and hypotenuse and want the sine value.
- You are preparing to find angle A using the inverse sine function.
- You need to verify a textbook answer or check your own trigonometry work.
- You are solving physics problems involving vertical components, like the height of a ramp or the vertical force on an incline.
- You are breaking a vector into its vertical and horizontal parts.
Common Mistakes
Watch out for these common errors when calculating sine:
- Using the adjacent side instead of the opposite side. Sine uses the side across from angle A, not the side next to it.
- Swapping a and c in the formula. The opposite side goes in the numerator, and the hypotenuse goes in the denominator. Writing c / a gives the cosecant, not the sine.
- Using sides measured in different units. If a is in centimeters and c is in inches, the ratio is meaningless. Convert to the same unit first.
- Forgetting that c must be greater than a. In a valid right triangle, the hypotenuse is always the longest side.
- Entering the right angle (90°) as angle A. Sine applies to the acute angles only. The 90° angle is at vertex B.
Frequently Asked Questions
Answers to the most common right-triangle solving questions.
01 What is the formula for sin(A) in a right triangle? expand_more
The formula is sin(A) = a / c, where a is the side opposite angle A and c is the hypotenuse. You divide the opposite side by the hypotenuse.
02 Why is sin(A) always less than 1 in a right triangle? expand_more
Because the hypotenuse c is always the longest side. Since a is shorter than c, the fraction a / c is always less than 1.
03 Can I use this calculator to find the angle itself? expand_more
This calculator gives you the sine value. To find the angle, use the inverse sine function: A = arcsin(sin(A)). You can do this with our right triangle angle calculator.
04 What does a sin(A) result of 0.5 mean? expand_more
It means the opposite side is exactly half the length of the hypotenuse. This corresponds to angle A being 30°.
05 Do I need to enter the adjacent side to calculate sine? expand_more
No. Sine only uses the opposite side a and the hypotenuse c. The adjacent side b is not part of the sine formula.