The Alchemist
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Homework Statement
Given the following relation for θ:
\frac{I_{\pi}}{I_{\sigma}} = \frac{\sin^2{\theta}}{1 + \cos^2{\theta}}
solve for θ
Homework Equations
\cos^2 x + \sin^2 x = 1
The Attempt at a Solution
If I solve this I get: \theta = \arcsin{\left(\pm\frac{2 I_{\pi}}{I_{\sigma}+I_{\pi}}\right)}
But the paper where this equation is from says: Consequently θ becomes:
\theta = \arctan{\left(\pm\frac{2 I_{\pi}}{I_{\sigma}-I_{\pi}}\right)}
Is there a way to come to the arctan expression? Or is the paper wrong? I'm quite stuck.