What are the derivatives of sine and cosine inverse functions?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around finding the derivatives of the inverse sine and cosine functions, specifically sin-1x and cos-1x. Participants are exploring the mathematical reasoning behind these derivatives in preparation for an exam.

Discussion Character

  • Mathematical reasoning, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants present various methods for deriving the derivatives, including using the chain rule and implicit differentiation. Some express confusion over the complexity of the processes involved, while others attempt to simplify their approaches.

Discussion Status

Several participants have shared their attempts at deriving the derivatives, with some providing specific formulas. There is a mix of approaches being discussed, and while some participants express understanding, others indicate that the methods are too complicated. No explicit consensus has been reached on a single approach.

Contextual Notes

One participant mentions using an older textbook, which may limit the resources available for understanding the topic. There is also a mention of memorization of the derivatives, indicating a potential gap in understanding the underlying concepts.

Yura
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I'm studying for my exam which is in four days and I've searched through my textbook (im using an old book because that's the one the school uses) and I can't seem find how to do the derivitives for the sine/cosine inverse functions:

sin^(-1)x

cos^(-1)x

Could anyone please tell me what these derive to please?
Thanks.
 
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Use [tex]{y'}_x = \frac{1}{{x'}_y}[/tex]. Take [tex]y=\arcsin x[/tex] and [tex]x=\sin y[/tex].

- Kamataat
 
sin¯¹x=1/√1-x² and cos¯¹x=-1/√1-x²

Hope this is what you are looking for.
 
I'll derive the sine one for you, try to use the process i use to find cosine.

[tex]g'(x)=\frac{1}{f'(g(x))}[/tex]

f(x)=sin(x), g(x)=sin-1(x)

and

y=sin(x) implies that x=sin(y) for the inverse


We know the derivative of sine is cosine, so the equation becomes..

[tex]\frac{1}{cos(sin^{-1}(x))}[/tex]

but we know that

[tex]cos(y)=\sqrt{1-sin^2(y)}[/tex]

also using the idea that [itex]cos(sin^{-1}(x))=cos(y)[/itex]

[tex]\frac{1}{\sqrt{1-sin^2y}}[/tex]

and from an equation above, x=sin(y), so the final product is:

[tex]\frac{d}{dx}(sin^{-1}(x))=\frac{1}{\sqrt{1-x^2}}[/tex]

Josh
 
Last edited:
Ah, I get it now. Thanks everyone!
 
It's too complicated.

Differentiate in both sides wrt "x"

[tex]x=\sin\left(\arcsin x\right)[/tex]

and

[tex]x=\cos\left(\arccos x\right)[/tex]

using for the RHS the chain rule.

Daniel.
 
I think everyone's is too complicated. Here's how I derive it.

(1)[tex]y=\sin^{-1}(x)[/tex]

(2)[tex]\sin(y)=x[/tex]

(3)[tex]\cos(y)\frac{dy}{dx}=1[/tex]

(4)[tex]\frac{dy}{dx}=\frac{1}{\cos(y)}[/tex]

Use a right trianlge to evaluate the cosine of y. So it's four written steps and however many you want to call using the triangle.
 
They are positive(for sin) and negative(for cos) 1/[(1-x^2)^(1/2)]

Unfortunatelly I had to memorize them...I have no clue why they're that, but they're 1 divided by square root of 1 - x^2 and negative that for cos.
 

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