NCERT Solutions for Class 11 Maths Chapter 3: Trigonometric Functions (NCERT 2026–27)
These Class 11 Maths Chapter 3 solutions cover Trigonometric Functions from the NCERT textbook (Reprint 2026–27). Every question of Exercise 3.1, Exercise 3.2, Exercise 3.3 and the Miscellaneous Exercise is reproduced verbatim and solved step by step — radian–degree conversion, signs and values of trigonometric functions, sum-and-difference identities and half-angle results — with every answer cross-checked against the NCERT answer key.
Chapter 3 Overview
Chapter 3 of Class 11 Maths, Trigonometric Functions, generalises the trigonometric ratios of acute angles studied earlier into trigonometric functions of any real angle. It begins with the two units of angle measure — degree and radian — and the relation π radian = 180° together with the arc-length formula l = rθ. It then defines sine and cosine using a unit circle, fixes the signs of all six functions in the four quadrants, lists their domains and ranges, and develops the sum and difference identities, double- and triple-angle formulas and the product–to–sum transformations. The Class 11 Maths Chapter 3 solutions below work through every numbered question of each exercise and the Miscellaneous Exercise.
Key Concepts & Definitions
Radian measure: the angle subtended at the centre by an arc equal in length to the radius. π radian = 180°, so 1 radian = 180°/π ≈ 57°16′.
Arc-length relation: if an arc of length l subtends an angle θ (in radians) at the centre of a circle of radius r, then θ = l/r, i.e. l = rθ.
Trigonometric functions: for a point P(a, b) on the unit circle with arc x, cos x = a and sin x = b; the other four are defined as cosec x = 1/sin x, sec x = 1/cos x, tan x = sin x/cos x, cot x = cos x/sin x.
Domain & range: sin and cos are defined for all real x with range [−1, 1]; tan and cot take all real values; sec and cosec have range (−∞, −1] ∪ [1, ∞).
Signs by quadrant (“All–Silver–Tea–Cups”): all positive in I; only sin (& cosec) in II; only tan (& cot) in III; only cos (& sec) in IV.
Periodicity: sin and cos repeat after 2π; tan and cot repeat after π.
Important Formulas (Chapter 3)
Conversions: Radian = (π/180) × Degree • Degree = (180/π) × Radian • l = rθ.
Pythagorean: sin2x + cos2x = 1 • 1 + tan2x = sec2x • 1 + cot2x = cosec2x.
Sum/difference: cos(x ± y) = cos x cos y ∓ sin x sin y • sin(x ± y) = sin x cos y ± cos x sin y • tan(x ± y) = (tan x ± tan y)/(1 ∓ tan x tan y).
Double angle: cos 2x = cos2x − sin2x = 2cos2x − 1 = 1 − 2sin2x = (1 − tan2x)/(1 + tan2x); sin 2x = 2 sin x cos x = 2tan x/(1 + tan2x); tan 2x = 2tan x/(1 − tan2x).
Triple angle: sin 3x = 3 sin x − 4 sin3x; cos 3x = 4 cos3x − 3 cos x; tan 3x = (3 tan x − tan3x)/(1 − 3 tan2x).
Sum–to–product: cos x + cos y = 2 cos½(x+y) cos½(x−y); cos x − cos y = −2 sin½(x+y) sin½(x−y); sin x + sin y = 2 sin½(x+y) cos½(x−y); sin x − sin y = 2 cos½(x+y) sin½(x−y).
Exercise 3.1 Solutions
Questions are reproduced verbatim from the NCERT textbook; the worked solutions are original and verified against the answers at the back of the book.
1. Find the radian measures corresponding to the following degree measures: (i) 25° (ii) −47°30′ (iii) 240° (iv) 520°
2. Find the degree measures corresponding to the following radian measures (Use π = 22/7). (i) 11/16 (ii) −4 (iii) 5π/3 (iv) 7π/6
3. A wheel makes 360 revolutions in one minute. Through how many radians does it turn in one second?
4. Find the degree measure of the angle subtended at the centre of a circle of radius 100 cm by an arc of length 22 cm (Use π = 22/7).
5. In a circle of diameter 40 cm, the length of a chord is 20 cm. Find the length of minor arc of the chord.
6. If in two circles, arcs of the same length subtend angles 60° and 75° at the centre, find the ratio of their radii.
7. Find the angle in radian through which a pendulum swings if its length is 75 cm and the tip describes an arc of length (i) 10 cm (ii) 15 cm (iii) 21 cm
Exercise 3.2 Solutions
In Exercises 1–5, find the values of the other five trigonometric functions; in Exercises 6–10, find the value of the trigonometric function.
1. cos x = −1/2, x lies in third quadrant.
2. sin x = 3/5, x lies in second quadrant.
3. cot x = 3/4, x lies in third quadrant.
4. sec x = 13/5, x lies in fourth quadrant.
5. tan x = −5/12, x lies in second quadrant.
6. Find the value of the trigonometric function sin 765°.
7. Find the value of the trigonometric function cosec (−1410°).
8. Find the value of the trigonometric function tan (19π/3).
9. Find the value of the trigonometric function sin (−11π/3).
10. Find the value of the trigonometric function cot (−15π/4).
Exercise 3.3 Solutions
1. Prove that sin2(π/6) + cos2(π/3) − tan2(π/4) = −1/2.
2. Prove that 2sin2(π/6) + cosec2(7π/6) cos2(π/3) = 3/2.
3. Prove that cot2(π/6) + cosec(5π/6) + 3tan2(π/6) = 6.
4. Prove that 2sin2(3π/4) + 2cos2(π/4) + 2sec2(π/3) = 10.
5. Find the value of: (i) sin 75° (ii) tan 15°
6. Prove that cos(π/4 − x) cos(π/4 − y) − sin(π/4 − x) sin(π/4 − y) = sin(x + y).
7. Prove that [tan(π/4 + x)] / [tan(π/4 − x)] = [(1 + tan x)/(1 − tan x)]2.
8. Prove that [cos(π + x) cos(−x)] / [sin(π − x) cos(π/2 + x)] = cot2x.
9. Prove that cos(3π/2 + x) cos(2π + x) [cot(3π/2 − x) + cot(2π + x)] = 1.
10. Prove that sin(n + 1)x sin(n + 2)x + cos(n + 1)x cos(n + 2)x = cos x.
11. Prove that cos(3π/4 + x) − cos(3π/4 − x) = −√2 sin x.
12. Prove that sin26x − sin24x = sin 2x sin 10x.
13. Prove that cos22x − cos26x = sin 4x sin 8x.
14. Prove that sin 2x + 2 sin 4x + sin 6x = 4 cos2x sin 4x.
15. Prove that cot 4x (sin 5x + sin 3x) = cot x (sin 5x − sin 3x).
16. Prove that (cos 9x − cos 5x)/(sin 17x − sin 3x) = −(sin 2x)/(cos 10x).
17. Prove that (sin 5x + sin 3x)/(cos 5x + cos 3x) = tan 4x.
18. Prove that (sin x − sin y)/(cos x + cos y) = tan[(x − y)/2].
19. Prove that (sin x + sin 3x)/(cos x + cos 3x) = tan 2x.
20. Prove that (sin x − sin 3x)/(sin2x − cos2x) = 2 sin x.
21. Prove that (cos 4x + cos 3x + cos 2x)/(sin 4x + sin 3x + sin 2x) = cot 3x.
22. Prove that cot x cot 2x − cot 2x cot 3x − cot 3x cot x = 1.
23. Prove that tan 4x = [4 tan x (1 − tan2x)] / (1 − 6 tan2x + tan4x).
24. Prove that cos 4x = 1 − 8 sin2x cos2x.
25. Prove that cos 6x = 32 cos6x − 48 cos4x + 18 cos2x − 1.
Miscellaneous Exercise on Chapter 3 Solutions
1. Prove that 2 cos(π/13) cos(9π/13) + cos(3π/13) + cos(5π/13) = 0.
2. Prove that (sin 3x + sin x) sin x + (cos 3x − cos x) cos x = 0.
3. Prove that (cos x + cos y)2 + (sin x − sin y)2 = 4 cos2[(x + y)/2].
4. Prove that (cos x − cos y)2 + (sin x − sin y)2 = 4 sin2[(x − y)/2].
5. Prove that sin x + sin 3x + sin 5x + sin 7x = 4 cos x cos 2x sin 4x.
6. Prove that [(sin 7x + sin 5x) + (sin 9x + sin 3x)] / [(cos 7x + cos 5x) + (cos 9x + cos 3x)] = tan 6x.
7. Prove that sin 3x + sin 2x − sin x = 4 sin x cos(x/2) cos(3x/2).
In Questions 8–10, find sin(x/2), cos(x/2) and tan(x/2).
8. tan x = −4/3, x in quadrant II.
9. cos x = −1/3, x in quadrant III.
10. sin x = 1/4, x in quadrant II.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Watch out for these
- Forgetting to convert degrees to radians (or vice-versa) before using l = rθ — the arc-length formula needs θ in radians.
- Taking the wrong sign for a function: always fix the sign from the quadrant (rule “All–Silver–Tea–Cups”) after taking the square root.
- Mixing up the period: sin/cos repeat after 2π but tan/cot repeat after π, so reduce large angles correctly.
- Errors in cos(x + y) — the sign rule is cos cos − sin sin for sum and + for difference (the opposite of sine).
- For half-angle problems, not checking the quadrant of x/2; the sign of sin(x/2)/cos(x/2) depends on where x/2 lies, not where x lies.
- Confusing the conversion formulas; remember Radian = (π/180) × Degree and Degree = (180/π) × Radian.
Practice MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. The radian measure of 240° is:
(a) 3π/4 (b) 4π/3 (c) 5π/3 (d) 2π/3
2. The degree measure of 5π/3 radian is:
(a) 270° (b) 300° (c) 330° (d) 360°
3. A wheel makes 360 revolutions per minute; the angle (in radian) turned in one second is:
(a) 6π (b) 12π (c) 24π (d) 360π
4. If cos x = −1/2 and x lies in the third quadrant, then tan x equals:
(a) −√3 (b) 1/√3 (c) √3 (d) −1/√3
5. The value of sin 765° is:
(a) 1 (b) 1/2 (c) 1/√2 (d) √3/2
6. The value of tan 15° is:
(a) 2 + √3 (b) 2 − √3 (c) √3 − 1 (d) √3 + 1
7. cos 2x in terms of tan x is:
(a) 2tan x/(1 + tan2x) (b) (1 − tan2x)/(1 + tan2x) (c) 2tan x/(1 − tan2x) (d) (1 + tan2x)/(1 − tan2x)
8. The range of the function y = sin x is:
(a) all real numbers (b) [0, 1] (c) [−1, 1] (d) (−∞, −1] ∪ [1, ∞)
9. sin 3x equals:
(a) 3 sin x − 4 sin3x (b) 4 sin3x − 3 sin x (c) 4 cos3x − 3 cos x (d) 3 cos x − 4 cos3x
10. The length of the minor arc of a chord of length 20 cm in a circle of diameter 40 cm is:
(a) 10π/3 cm (b) 20π/3 cm (c) 40π/3 cm (d) 20π cm
For each Assertion–Reason question, choose: (A) Both Assertion and Reason are true and the Reason is the correct explanation of the Assertion; (B) Both are true but the Reason is not the correct explanation; (C) Assertion is true but Reason is false; (D) Assertion is false but Reason is true.
A-R 1. Assertion: 25° equals 5π/36 radian.
Reason: A degree measure is converted to radian by multiplying by π/180.
A-R 2. Assertion: If x lies in the second quadrant, then sin x > 0 while cos x < 0.
Reason: In the second quadrant the x-coordinate of a unit-circle point is negative and the y-coordinate is positive.
A-R 3. Assertion: cos(x + y) = cos x cos y + sin x sin y.
Reason: cos is an even function, so cos(−x) = cos x.
A-R 4. Assertion: tan x has period π, not 2π.
Reason: tan(π + x) = tan x for every x in the domain of tan.
A-R 5. Assertion: For an arc of length l subtending angle θ at the centre of a circle of radius r, l = rθ.
Reason: The angle θ here must be measured in degrees.
Quick Revision Summary
- π radian = 180°; Radian = (π/180) × Degree, Degree = (180/π) × Radian; arc length l = rθ (θ in radians).
- On the unit circle cos x = a, sin x = b; sin2x + cos2x = 1, 1 + tan2x = sec2x, 1 + cot2x = cosec2x.
- Signs by quadrant: I all +, II only sin/cosec +, III only tan/cot +, IV only cos/sec +.
- sin & cos have range [−1, 1] and period 2π; tan & cot have period π.
- Sum/difference and double/triple-angle identities convert between products and sums — the backbone of every proof in this chapter.
- For half-angle values use 2sin2(x/2) = 1 − cos x and 2cos2(x/2) = 1 + cos x, then fix signs from the quadrant of x/2.
How to score full marks in this chapter
Memorise the sum–to–product and product–to–sum formulas cold — almost every “prove that” question is one substitution away from the answer. Always state the identity you are applying before the line that uses it, keep θ in radians for arc-length problems, and decide every sign from the correct quadrant. For half-angle problems, write the quadrant of x/2 first so your final signs are never guesswork.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Class 11 Maths Chapter 3 about?
Chapter 3, Trigonometric Functions, covers degree and radian measure, the arc-length formula l = rθ, the definition of the six trigonometric functions on the unit circle, their signs, domains, ranges and periods, and the sum, difference, double-, triple-angle and product–to–sum identities.
How many exercises are there in Class 11 Maths Chapter 3?
There are three exercises — Exercise 3.1 (radian/degree and arc length), Exercise 3.2 (values and signs of functions) and Exercise 3.3 (identities) — plus a Miscellaneous Exercise. All questions are solved step by step on this page.
How do you convert degrees to radians?
Multiply the degree measure by π/180. For example, 25° = 25 × π/180 = 5π/36 radian. To go the other way, multiply the radian measure by 180/π.
Are these Class 11 Maths Chapter 3 solutions free?
Yes. All ClearStudy NCERT Solutions for Class 11 Maths Chapter 3 are free and follow the official NCERT textbook for the 2026–27 session, with every answer verified against the book’s answer key.
