QUESTION IMAGE
Question
examine the given triangle.
which two equations can be used to solve for the value of ( x )?
a. ( square \tan 22^circ = \frac{x}{12} )
b. ( square \tan 68^circ = \frac{x}{12} )
c. ( square \tan 90^circ = \frac{12}{x} )
d. ( square \tan 68^circ = \frac{12}{x} )
e. ( square \tan 22^circ = \frac{12}{x} )
Step1: Recall trigonometric ratios
In a right triangle, $\tan(\theta) = \frac{\text{opposite}}{\text{adjacent}}$. The right triangle has angles $90^\circ$, $68^\circ$, so the third angle is $90 - 68 = 22^\circ$.
Step2: Analyze for $68^\circ$ angle
For $\theta = 68^\circ$, the opposite side to $68^\circ$ is $12$, and the adjacent side is $x$. So $\tan(68^\circ) = \frac{12}{x}$? Wait, no: Wait, opposite to $68^\circ$ is $12$? Wait, no, the right angle is at the bottom left, so the sides: vertical side is $12$ (opposite to $68^\circ$), horizontal side is $x$ (adjacent to $68^\circ$). Wait, no: angle at the bottom right is $68^\circ$, so the side opposite to $68^\circ$ is the vertical leg (length 12), and the side adjacent to $68^\circ$ is the horizontal leg (length $x$). So $\tan(68^\circ) = \frac{\text{opposite}}{\text{adjacent}} = \frac{12}{x}$? Wait, no, wait: $\tan(\theta) = \frac{\text{opposite}}{\text{adjacent}}$. So for $\theta = 68^\circ$, opposite is $12$, adjacent is $x$, so $\tan(68^\circ) = \frac{12}{x}$? Wait, no, that would be if $x$ is adjacent. Wait, no, let's re-express. Wait, the vertical side is $12$ (let's say it's the opposite to the $68^\circ$ angle), and the horizontal side is $x$ (adjacent to the $68^\circ$ angle). So $\tan(68^\circ) = \frac{\text{opposite}}{\text{adjacent}} = \frac{12}{x}$? Wait, no, wait: if the angle is $68^\circ$, then the opposite side is the vertical one (length 12), and the adjacent side is the horizontal one (length $x$). So $\tan(68^\circ) = \frac{12}{x}$? Wait, no, that's not right. Wait, maybe I mixed up. Let's take the other angle, $22^\circ$ (since $90 - 68 = 22$). For the $22^\circ$ angle, the opposite side is $x$, and the adjacent side is $12$. So $\tan(22^\circ) = \frac{x}{12}$. Alternatively, for the $68^\circ$ angle, the opposite side is $12$, and the adjacent side is $x$, so $\tan(68^\circ) = \frac{12}{x}$. Wait, but let's check the options. Option A: $\tan 22^\circ = \frac{x}{12}$ – that's correct because for $22^\circ$, opposite is $x$, adjacent is $12$. Option B: $\tan 68^\circ = \frac{x}{12}$ – no, because opposite is $12$, adjacent is $x$, so $\tan 68^\circ = \frac{12}{x}$. Wait, option D: $\tan 68^\circ = \frac{12}{x}$ – that's correct. Option E: $\tan 22^\circ = \frac{12}{x}$ – no, because for $22^\circ$, opposite is $x$, adjacent is $12$, so $\tan 22^\circ = \frac{x}{12}$. Wait, maybe I made a mistake. Let's re-express:
In a right triangle, the two acute angles are complementary (sum to $90^\circ$). So angle at the top is $22^\circ$ (since $90 - 68 = 22$).
For angle $22^\circ$:
- Opposite side: $x$ (horizontal leg)
- Adjacent side: $12$ (vertical leg)
So $\tan(22^\circ) = \frac{\text{opposite}}{\text{adjacent}} = \frac{x}{12}$ (which is option A).
For angle $68^\circ$:
- Opposite side: $12$ (vertical leg)
- Adjacent side: $x$ (horizontal leg)
So $\tan(68^\circ) = \frac{\text{opposite}}{\text{adjacent}} = \frac{12}{x}$ (which is option D). Wait, but option D is $\tan 68^\circ = \frac{12}{x}$? Wait, the options are:
A. $\tan 22^\circ = \frac{x}{12}$ – correct (as above)
B. $\tan 68^\circ = \frac{x}{12}$ – incorrect (since opposite is 12, adjacent is x, so tan68 = 12/x)
C. $\tan 90^\circ = \frac{12}{x}$ – tan90 is undefined, so incorrect
D. $\tan 68^\circ = \frac{12}{x}$ – correct (as above)
E. $\tan 22^\circ = \frac{12}{x}$ – incorrect (tan22 = x/12)
Wait, but the problem says "which TWO equations". So A and D? Wait, let's check again.
Angle at the bottom right is $68^\circ$, so the other acute angle is $22^\circ$ (since 90 - 68 = 22).
For angle $22^\cir…
Snap & solve any problem in the app
Get step-by-step solutions on Sovi AI
Photo-based solutions with guided steps
Explore more problems and detailed explanations
A. $\tan 22^\circ = \frac{x}{12}$, D. $\tan 68^\circ = \frac{12}{x}$