What are the versed sine and coversed sine of an angle?

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The versed sine of an angle, or versine, is defined as 1 minus the cosine of that angle, indicating how much the cosine value falls short of unity. For example, the versed sine of 30° is approximately 0.134. Conversely, the coversed sine, or coversine, is calculated as 1 minus the sine of the angle, with the coversine of 30° equaling 0.5. While these terms are mathematically relevant, the versine is not commonly used in modern applications. Understanding these concepts can enhance comprehension of trigonometric functions.
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Homework Statement


The quantity by which the cosine falls short of unity. Ie: 1-cos angle AOP is called the versed sine of AOP.
The quantity 1-sin AOP by which the sine falls short of unity is called the coversed sine of AOP..
HUH? Falls short of what?
 
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Miike012 said:

Homework Statement


The quantity by which the cosine falls short of unity. Ie: 1-cos angle AOP is called the versed sine of AOP.
The quantity 1-sin AOP by which the sine falls short of unity is called the coversed sine of AOP..
HUH? Falls short of what?

Falls short of unity, and unity means the number one, of course. The versed sine (or versine) of an angle is the difference of 1 and the cosine of that angle.

versin 30° = 1 - cos 30° ≈ 1 - 0.866 ≈ 0.134

The coversed sine (coversine) of an angle is the difference of 1 and the sine of that angle.
coversin 30° = 1 - sin 30° = 1 - 0.5 = 0.5

BTW, the versine isn't used much these days. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Versine" .
 
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