No. The sine of an angle is not directly proportional to the angle. It is a function of the angle, but it is periodic, repeating every 360 degrees of the angle.
The sine theta of an angle (in a right triangle) is the side opposite of the angle divided by the hypotenuse.
12%
We'll answer your question as asked. What was asked was, "What is the sine of the angle (the angle theta) if the angle measures 0.4384?" That's the way the question reads. That's a pretty small angle. Less than one degree. That angle has about 0.00765 as the sine. Perhaps the question was "What is the angle of theta if its sine is 0.4384?" In the event that this was really your question, if sine theta equals 0.4384, arcsine theta is about 23.00 degrees. Here we use the term arcsine. If we see "arcsine 0.4384" in a text, what it means is "the angle whose sine is 0.4384" in math speak.
at a 45 degree angle, or pi/4
0.602
The effort required is directly proportional to the sine of the angle of inclination.Since the sine of an angle increases with increase in angle, therefore the effort required also increases.
The result is a direct consequence of the sine rule.
No
in a series RC circuit phase angle is directly proportional to the capacitance
the sine of a 30 degree angle is 0.5
the sine of an angle can't be greater than 1.0
It is Lami`s theorem.
It is 1.
The sine theta of an angle (in a right triangle) is the side opposite of the angle divided by the hypotenuse.
Sine of an angle (in a right triangle) is the side opposite of the angle divided by the hypotenuse.
An angle can have a sine ratio, not a triangle.
Sine = opposite / hypotenuse