How would the arcsin function look like without a restricted range?

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The discussion centers on the arcsin function and its behavior without a restricted range. Participants clarify that arcsin is the inverse of the sine function, which is typically limited to the range of [-π/2, π/2]. Without restrictions, the arcsin graph would replicate the standard arcsin plot infinitely along the y-axis, reflecting the sine function's periodicity. However, this would not qualify as a function due to multiple y-values for a single x-value. The conversation concludes with an understanding that the unrestricted arcsin graph resembles the sine function but with necessary reflections and shifts.
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I need help. I'm totally puzzled. How would the arcsin function look like without a restricted range? Can anyone post an image?

http://img94.imageshack.us/img94/9886/arcsin.png
 
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Why do you think the range is not R, but it is restricted ? Usually plotting computer software knows its maths...
 


dextercioby said:
Why do you think the range is not R, but it is restricted ? Usually plotting computer software knows its maths...

Hmm? I understand that arcsin is just the inverse of the sin function which is restricted between negative pi/2 and positive pi/2. But I want a graph of the function that is the inverse of the sin function without any domain restrictions on the sin function. It wouldn't be a function though, because it wouldn't pass the vertical line test.
 


So you want the subset of \mathbb{R}\oplus\mathbb{R} made up of

S= \{(x,\arcsin x)| x\in [-1,1]\}

and the values of arcsine are 'copied' from [-\pi/2,\pi/2] into [-\pi/2 +n\pi ,\pi/2 + n \pi] and n can take any integer value ?

So it's just an infinite multiplication of the plot of the standard arcsine with a shift along Oy axis of \pi.
 


dextercioby said:
So you want the subset of \mathbb{R}\oplus\mathbb{R} made up of

S= \{(x,\arcsin x)| x\in [-1,1]\}

and the values of arcsine are 'copied' from [-\pi/2,\pi/2] into [-\pi/2 +n\pi ,\pi/2 + n \pi] and n can take any integer value ?

So it's just an infinite multiplication of the plot of the standard arcsine with a shift along Oy axis of \pi.

I really wish I understood what a subset is. We're learning the inverse trigonometric functions in the trigonometry unit of my precalculus class, so I haven't really gotten into more complex stuff.

What do you mean by infinite multiplication of the plot of the standard arcsine? What's Oy and \pi?
 


Multiplication means repeating, copying the points in the plot of arcsin x, where x ranges from -1 to 1. Oy is the Y axis.
 


So it would look like this: http://img819.imageshack.us/img819/5679/62578051.png
 
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Actually, no, that's wrong. I understand the arcsin's with vertical shifts of 2pi, but sin(x + pi) = -sin(x), so wouldn't the arcsin's with vertical shifts of npi (where n is every odd integer) need to be horizontally reflected?
 


Without restricting the domain, the graph of arcsine would look exactly like the graph of sine but along the y-axis, not the x-axis. Of course, that is not the graph of a function since one value of x would give infinitely many values of y.
 
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Thanks everyone. It makes sense now.
 
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