Proving the Double-Angle Formula for Tangent with Step-by-Step Solution

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The discussion centers on proving the double-angle formula for tangent, specifically \(\tan 3\theta=\frac{3\tan\theta-\tan^3\theta}{1-3\tan\theta}\). Participants suggest starting with the left side and expanding \(\tan(2\theta + \theta)\) to derive the right side. There are corrections regarding the use of parentheses in the algebraic expressions to clarify the calculations. One participant emphasizes the importance of checking algebraic steps to ensure accuracy. The conversation highlights the need for careful manipulation of trigonometric identities to arrive at the correct proof.
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Having some trouble with this one. Can anyone help me out?

Many thanks.

Homework Statement



Prove that \tan 3\theta=\frac{3\tan\theta-\tan^3\theta}{1-3\tan\theta}

Homework Equations



The Attempt at a Solution



\frac{3\sin\theta}{\cos\theta}-\frac{\sin^3\theta}{\cos^3\theta}/1-\frac{3\sin^2\theta}{\cos^2\theta}
\frac{3\sin\theta\cos\theta-\sin^3\theta}{\cos^2\theta-3\sin^2\theta}
\frac{\sin\theta(3\cos\theta-\sin^2\theta)}{\cos^2\theta-3\sin^2\theta}
...
 
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It will be easier to use the left side to prove the right side.


tan3θ = tan(2θ+θ)

Expand out tan(2θ+θ), what do you get?
 
odolwa99 said:

Homework Statement



Prove that \tan 3\theta=\frac{3\tan\theta-\tan^3\theta}{1-3\tan\theta}
The tangent in the denominator should be squared.

The Attempt at a Solution



\frac{3\sin\theta}{\cos\theta}-\frac{\sin^3\theta}{\cos^3\theta}/1-\frac{3\sin^2\theta}{\cos^2\theta}
Use parentheses! That should be
\left( \frac{3\sin\theta}{\cos\theta} - \frac{\sin^3\theta}{\cos^3\theta}\right) / \left(1-\frac{3\sin^2\theta}{\cos^2\theta}\right)

\frac{3\sin\theta\cos\theta-\sin^3\theta}{\cos^2\theta-3\sin^2\theta}
Check your algebra. That line doesn't follow from the one above.
 
Ok, thank you. I'll give that a 2nd look.
 
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