SOME APPLICATIONS OF TRIGONOMETRY-True/False

This set of 25 True/False questions on Chapter 9 “Some Applications of Trigonometry” has been carefully designed to strengthen conceptual understanding as well as exam-oriented problem-solving skills for Class 10 students. The questions systematically cover key ideas such as line of sight, angle of elevation, angle of depression, and the interpretation of right-angled triangles in height and distance situations. By working through these statements with detailed explanations, learners can revise all core concepts of the chapter and avoid common misconceptions that often lead to errors in board examinations. Each statement encourages students to visualize real-life scenarios like towers, buildings, ships, kites, and lighthouses and convert them into mathematical models using trigonometric ratios like sine, cosine, and tangent. The explanations not only confirm whether the statement is correct but also justify the reasoning in simple language, aligning with NCERT and CBSE guidelines for stepwise presentation. This makes the resource ideal for classroom use, self-study, last-minute revision, and concept drilling before CBSE, state board, and school-level tests.

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Exercise • Jan 2026

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Exercise

SOME APPLICATIONS OF TRIGONOMETRY

by Academia Aeternum

1. The chapter “Some Applications of Trigonometry” mainly deals with problems on heights and distances.
2. In this chapter, angles are always measured in radians.
3. The line joining the observer’s eye to the object being viewed is called the line of sight.
4. The angle of elevation is formed when an observer looks downward at an object from a higher point.
5. The angle between the horizontal line through the eye and the line of sight when looking up is called the angle of elevation.
6. The angle of depression is measured from the vertical line down to the line of sight.
7. In height and distance problems of this chapter, all triangles considered are right-angled triangles.
8. The height of an object can be found using trigonometric ratios without knowing any horizontal distance.
9. In this chapter, problems may involve both angle of elevation and angle of depression in the same figure.
10. The angle of elevation of the top of a tower from a point on the ground decreases as the observer moves closer to the tower.
11. When the height of an object is fixed, the longer its shadow on level ground, the smaller the Sun’s altitude (angle of elevation).
12. The line of sight is always horizontal.
13. The distance between two points on a horizontal plane is taken as the base of the right triangle in height and distance problems.
14. The height of a kite above the ground can be found using the length of its string and the angle it makes with the horizontal, assuming no slack.
15. To solve numerical problems in this chapter, it is not necessary to draw a rough figure.
16. If the angle of elevation of the top of a building is \(45^\circ\) and the distance from the observer to the building is known, the height of the building equals that distance.
17. In this chapter, the trigonometric ratios \(\sin \theta,\ \cos \theta, \text{ and }\tan \theta\) are used, but \(\cot \theta,\ \sec \theta, \text{ and } \text{ cosec }\theta\) are never used.
18. The term “height” in this chapter always refers only to the height of buildings.
19. In angle of depression problems, the observer is usually at a higher level than the object being observed.
20. In all examples of this chapter, the ground is assumed to be horizontal and level unless stated otherwise.
21. When the angle of elevation increases but the height of the object remains the same, the observer must be moving away from the object.
22. The distance of a ship from a lighthouse can be found by using the height of the lighthouse and the angle of elevation of its top from the ship.
23. The angle of elevation of the top of a tower from a point on the ground is always greater than \(90^\circ\).
24. While solving questions of this chapter, it is often useful to convert word problems into algebraic equations involving trigonometric ratios.
25. The chapter “Some Applications of Trigonometry” introduces new trigonometric identities that are not used in previous chapters.

Frequently Asked Questions

To apply trigonometric ratios (sin, cos, tan) to real-life problems involving heights and distances using angles of elevation and depression.

The straight, imaginary line joining the observer’s eye to the object being viewed.

The angle formed between the horizontal line of sight and the upward line of sight when an observer looks at an object above eye level.

The angle formed between the horizontal line of sight and the downward line of sight when an observer views an object below eye level.

Because the horizontal distance and vertical height naturally form perpendicular lines, creating right triangles useful for applying trigonometric ratios.

Primarily tangent (tan ?), but sine (sin ?) and cosine (cos ?) are also used depending on known sides.

tan ? = Opposite side / Adjacent side.

When the vertical height corresponds to the opposite side and the given length is the hypotenuse.

When the horizontal distance corresponds to the adjacent side and the given length is the hypotenuse.

Only standard angles (30°, 45°, 60°) are used, whose trigonometric ratios are known.

sin 30°=½, sin 45°=v2/2, sin 60°=v3/2; cos 30°=v3/2, cos 45°=v2/2, cos 60°=½; tan 30°=1/v3, tan 45°=1, tan 60°=v3.

Draw a clear, labeled diagram converting the scenario into a right triangle.

It helps identify the unknown side, the angle given, and the correct trigonometric ratio to use.

The imaginary line parallel to the ground passing through the observer’s eye.

The person, point, or object from which sight or measurement is taken.

Towers, poles, trees, buildings, mountains, ships, airplanes, balloons, and bridges.

A distance that cannot be measured directly, requiring trigonometric methods.

Yes, by using angles of elevation or depression from a known point.

Two-point observation method, resulting in two different right triangles.

Use tan ? = height/distance ? height = distance × tan ?.

distance = height / tan ?.

Viewing the top of a tower or kite from ground level.

Seeing a car from a lighthouse balcony.

Observing the same object from two different positions, yielding two different elevation angles.

As the observer moves closer, the angle of elevation increases.

Right-triangle geometry and trigonometric ratios.

Finding height, distance, width, altitude, or length using given angles of elevation or depression.

Sometimes, when two sides are known or trigonometric ratios are insufficient.

tan 45° = 1, simplifying height = distance.

tan 30° = 1/v3, often appearing in height problems requiring rationalization.

The object is vertically above the observer—distance is zero (mostly theoretical).

Opposite is the vertical side from angle; adjacent is the horizontal side.

NCERT restricts problems to standard angles with known ratios.

Theodolite, used by surveyors to measure angles.

To estimate altitude and distance from the ground.

For determining distance of ships, lighthouses, and ports.

The syllabus focuses only on elementary applications—heights and distances.

Single angle of elevation with either height or distance known.

When two right triangles share a common vertical line or horizontal line.

A real-life scenario with one or two angles and one unknown distance, requiring diagram + calculation.

Convert angle of depression to angle of elevation at the lower point (alternate interior angles).

Because they form alternate interior angles with horizontal lines.

Use tan ? = shadow length / height or vice versa.

Yes, especially when forming equations from the triangle.

To provide practical, realistic measurements.

Yes, depending on the triangle setup and chosen trigonometric ratio.

Height represents perpendicular distance from ground to the object’s top.

Yes, by modelling below-ground or underwater observations.

It strengthens understanding of angles and their variation.

Neat diagram, correct ratio selection, accurate steps, and clear final answer with units.

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