Find the at which value does the 1/(1-6sinx) is discontinous

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The function 1/(1-6sinx) is discontinuous when the denominator equals zero, specifically at 1-6sinx=0, leading to x=arcsin(1/6). The discontinuities occur at x=arcsin(1/6)+2πn and x=π-arcsin(1/6)+2πn due to the periodic nature of the sine function. The arcsin function is restricted to the interval [-π/2, π/2], but sine itself has solutions in both the first and second quadrants. The addition of 2πn accounts for the periodicity of sine, allowing for multiple solutions. Understanding these concepts clarifies the reasoning behind the discontinuities of the function.
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Homework Statement



so, find the at which value does the 1/(1-6sinx) is discontinous

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



so, it's discontinous when the bottom is equal to zero, which is 1-6sinx=0

solve for x, which give arcsin(1/6).

and now, the correct answer is x is not = arcsin(1/6)+2pi n
and x is not = pi-arcsin(1/6)+2pi n


the bold part is where i don't understand. what? the arcsin has a period of 2pi? did we already restrict it to -pi/2 to pi/2?
what? how come the answer lays on the second quadrant? shouldn't it be lay either in first or the fourth quadraint?

what? how come the we ignore the third quadrant?

don't get it. need help
 
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1-6*sin(arcsin(1/6)+2*pi*n) is equal to zero isn't it? sin is periodic with period 2pi, arcsin doesn't have to be.
 
Dick said:
1-6*sin(arcsin(1/6)+2*pi*n) is equal to zero isn't it? sin is periodic with period 2pi, arcsin doesn't have to be.

Hello

yes, sin is periodic, but why we add 2pi n at the end, and why we subtract that from pi. I don't get it. is there a way to derive this?
 
kougou said:
Hello

yes, sin is periodic, but why we add 2pi n at the end, and why we subtract that from pi. I don't get it. is there a way to derive this?

Look at a graph of sin(x) on [-pi,pi]. There are two values of x where sin(x)=1/6, yes? One is arcsin(1/6). The other is pi-arcsin(1/6). You can read those off the graph. Now you can add 2*pi*n to either one since sin is periodic.
 
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