Trigonometry 7th Edition

Published by Cengage Learning
ISBN 10: 1111826854
ISBN 13: 978-1-11182-685-7

Chapter 7 - Section 7.3 - The Ambiguous Case - 7.3 Problem Set - Page 389: 2

Answer

With the ambiguous case, there may be $zero, one$ or $two$ triangles that are determined.

Work Step by Step

When two sides and an angle opposite to any one of the given sides are known, then it is ambiguous. Zero triangle can be formed if we do not connect the other side with with the vertices of the triangle. For one triangle we can join the vertices which will form one triangle.
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