To calculate this, you need to know two identities:
sin^2(x)+cos^2(x)=1 <=> sin^2(x)=1-cos^2(x)sin2(x)+cos2(x)=1⇔sin2(x)=1−cos2(x)\color(white)(.............)(1)
cos(arccos(x))=x\color(white)(.............) (2)
From (2), we know that we need to have a cosine instead of a sine. We can convert a sine into a cosine by using (1). If we want to use (1), we need sin^2, so let's square the expression.
To allow us to square, we'll also immediately take the square root:
sqrt((sin(arccos(1/2)))^2)=sqrt(sin^2(arccos(1/2)))
Now, we can use (1)
sqrt(1-cos^2(arccos(1/2)))=sqrt(1-cos(arccos(1/2))*cos(arccos(1/2)))
Now, we can use (2)
sqrt(1-1/2*1/2)=sqrt(1-1/4)=sqrt(3/4)=sqrt(3)/2