teme92
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Homework Statement
Given that cos(\pi/6) =\sqrt{}3/2, use the double angle formula for the cosine function to find cos(\pi/12) and sin(\pi/12) explicitly.
Homework Equations
cos(2x)=cos2x - sin2x
cos2x + sin2x = 1
The Attempt at a Solution
So it wants me to find cos(\pi/12) which is half the angle of cos(\pi/6). So I called these cosx and cos 2x.
I then said \sqrt{}3/2 = cos2x - sin2x
I used cos2x + sin2x = 1 and got sin2x on its own and subbed into the first formula and then got cosx on its own.
For sin(\pi/12) I subbed in sin2x = 1- cos2x and got sinx on its own.
Is this the correct method for finding the answers?
The inverse of cosx and sinx were \pi/12 so I assume I am but not sure. I'd be thankful to anyone who could clear this up.