So, for example, if θ = 2π, then θ = 2π ≠ cos-1(cos(2π)) = cos-1(1) = 0.

  • Thread starter Thread starter EngnrMatt
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Cosine Function
AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the mathematical problem involving the cosine function, where cosθ is given as 1.316581. It highlights that the cosine function is restricted to values between -1 and 1, indicating that cosθ cannot exceed 1, thus yielding no real solutions for this case. The original poster seeks to understand how to restrict the value of cosθ to find θ, particularly in the context of solving a larger SAS triangle problem. A correction is made regarding the inverse cosine function, clarifying that cos⁻¹(cosθ) equals θ only when θ is between 0 and π, not 0 and 1. Overall, the conversation emphasizes the limitations of the cosine function and the need for accurate understanding of its properties.
EngnrMatt
Messages
34
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement



cosθ = 1.316581

Homework Equations



cos-1cosθ = θ // if and only if 0\leqθ\leq1

The Attempt at a Solution



This problem is actually the result of an attempt at a solution to solve an even larger problem (SAS triangle specifically). I need to know how to restrict the cosθ value in order to get θ. If it helps any, the original fraction was (49-196.457081)/-112

I know its got to be simple. I just have a terrible professor for math :P
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Well cosθ > 1 will yield no real solutions as -1≤cosθ≤1


Meaning that the maximum value of cosθ is 1 and the minimum value is -1.
 
EngnrMatt said:

Homework Statement



cosθ = 1.316581

Homework Equations



cos-1cosθ = θ // if and only if 0\leqθ\leq1

The Attempt at a Solution



This problem is actually the result of an attempt at a solution to solve an even larger problem (SAS triangle specifically). I need to know how to restrict the cosθ value in order to get θ. If it helps any, the original fraction was (49-196.457081)/-112

I know its got to be simple. I just have a terrible professor for math :P
As rock.freak667 point out, cos(θ) can never be greater than 1, nor less than -1.

Perhaps θ = 1.316581 and you need to find cos(∂).

As for your statement: cos-1cosθ = θ // if and only if 0 ≤ θ ≤ 1 , that's incorrect.

The correct statement is
\displaystyle \cos^{-1}(\cos(\theta))=\theta\ \ \text{ if and only if }\ \ 0\le\theta\le\pi\ .​
 
I tried to combine those 2 formulas but it didn't work. I tried using another case where there are 2 red balls and 2 blue balls only so when combining the formula I got ##\frac{(4-1)!}{2!2!}=\frac{3}{2}## which does not make sense. Is there any formula to calculate cyclic permutation of identical objects or I have to do it by listing all the possibilities? Thanks
Essentially I just have this problem that I'm stuck on, on a sheet about complex numbers: Show that, for ##|r|<1,## $$1+r\cos(x)+r^2\cos(2x)+r^3\cos(3x)...=\frac{1-r\cos(x)}{1-2r\cos(x)+r^2}$$ My first thought was to express it as a geometric series, where the real part of the sum of the series would be the series you see above: $$1+re^{ix}+r^2e^{2ix}+r^3e^{3ix}...$$ The sum of this series is just: $$\frac{(re^{ix})^n-1}{re^{ix} - 1}$$ I'm having some trouble trying to figure out what to...
Back
Top