<p>Am I expected to know the values of various sin/cos functions for the test?</p>
<p>Like some problems in the Princeton Review book involve finding sin 30 or cos 60 ... ugh ... </p>
<p>Will there be a formula sheet on test day :)?</p>
<p>Am I expected to know the values of various sin/cos functions for the test?</p>
<p>Like some problems in the Princeton Review book involve finding sin 30 or cos 60 ... ugh ... </p>
<p>Will there be a formula sheet on test day :)?</p>
<p>No formula sheet. Probably not a bad idea to know the sine and cosine of 0, 30, 45, 60, and 90 degrees.</p>
<p>sin and cos of 30 45 60 is so easy lol.</p>
<p>ROOOFL SheepGetKilled’s right , you shoulda known them by sophomore year</p>
<p>Yeah I know that sin/cos/tan 30, 45, and 60 are easy (sin and cos have the same numbers, just in reverse, and tan is sin/cos).</p>
<p>But what about the kinematic equations, for example? No formula sheet? Am I supposed to go in there with all the kinematic equations memorized?</p>
<p>^Yes, NO formulas at all are given. But generally the questions tend to require more conceptual knowledge than the use of formulas.</p>
<p>Try [googling</a> sat physics formulas](<a href=“sat physics formulas]googling - Google Search”>sat physics formulas - Google Search) for a decent list of formulas to memorize.</p>