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angelcase
Jul2-10, 07:09 PM
Given sinθ = 0.6, calculate tanθ without using the inverse sine function, but instead by using one or more trigonometric identities. You will find two possible values.

I found one of the values using sin^2 (theta) + cos^2 (theta) = 1

I tried using cos (90 + theta)= sin theta to find the second one, but couldn't remember if you were able to distribute the cos...since addition is communitive or whatever that property is called...and get cos 90 + cos theta= sin theta

JonF
Jul2-10, 07:22 PM
I'd use these:

tan(x) = sin(x)/cos(x)
Sin = Opposite / Hypotinuse
Cos =Adjacent / Hypotinuse
Opposite^2 + Adjacent^2 = Hypotinuse^2
.6 = 6/10

JonF
Jul2-10, 07:32 PM
I tried using cos (90 + theta)= sin theta to find the second one, but couldn't remember if you were able to distribute the cos...since addition is communitive or whatever that property is called...and get cos 90 + cos theta= sin theta
I should talk about this too. You can't distrubte any given function over addition. And cos(90 +x) isn’t sin(x), it’s –sin(x). But in general cos(u + v) = cos(u)cos(v) – sin(u)sin(v)

angelcase
Jul3-10, 12:08 AM
Thank you JonF...the cos(90 + theta)= sin theta was in my text as a trig equation to use...I didn't make it up...I know that the derivative of cos is -sin and the derivative of sin is cos, and tan is sec^2...I get all the derivative stuff..Just seem to have an issue with the basics, which to me is pretty pathetic..On my part.

Pere Callahan
Jul3-10, 12:19 AM
You can't distrubte any given function over addition.
You can if the function in question happens to be linear. The cosine function is apparently not linear so you can not distribute.

Tedjn
Jul3-10, 03:45 AM
To the OP, you should find two possible values from sin2θ + cos2θ = 1. This is because there is both a positive and negative square root.

Redbelly98
Jul3-10, 05:59 AM
Moderator's note: thread moved from General Math to Homework & Coursework Questions area.

Unit
Jul4-10, 02:20 AM
Forget identities! Draw a unit circle with two right triangles in it! The angle at the origin will be θ and the hypotenuse (radius) will be 1. If sinθ = 0.6, where will the 0.6 go? And, given a hypotenuse of 1 and one side, could you find the other side, considering the Pythagorean theorem?

Redbelly98
Jul4-10, 05:49 AM
Forget identities! Draw a unit circle with two right triangles in it! The angle at the origin will be θ and the hypotenuse (radius) will be 1. If sinθ = 0.6, where will the 0.6 go? And, given a hypotenuse of 1 and one side, could you find the other side, considering the Pythagorean theorem?
The OP has already solved half of the problem using the identity
sin^2 (theta) + cos^2 (theta) = 1
She could either use your graphical method, or she could consider the two solutions for cos(θ) in that equation by taking a negative square root.