Consider some angle whose measure is
A. Consider a
circle of unit radius and center O. Let the arc PQ of the circle subtend an angle
A at the center O. Drop the
perpendicular QR from Q to OP; then the length of the line segment RQ is the value of the trigonometric sine of the angle
A. Let PS be an arc of the circle whose length is equal to the length of the segment RQ. For various angles
A, Madhava's table gives the measures of the corresponding angles \anglePOS in
arcminutes,
arcseconds and sixtieths of an
arcsecond. As an example, let
A be an angle whose measure is 22.50°. In Madhava's table, the entry corresponding to 22.50° is the measure in arcminutes, arcseconds and sixtieths of an arcsecond of the angle whose radian measure is the value of sin 22.50°, which is 0.3826834; :multiply 0.3826834 radians by 180/ to convert to 21.92614 degrees, which is :1315 arcminutes 34 arcseconds 07 sixtieths of an arcsecond, abbreviated 13153407. For an angle whose measure is
A, let :\angle POS = m \text{ arcminutes, } s \text{ arcseconds, } t \text{ sixtieths of an arcsecond} Then: : \begin{align} \sin (A) & = RQ \\ & = \text{length of arc } PS \\ & = \angle POS \text{ in radians} \\ \end{align} ==Derivation of trigonometric sines from the table==