nowayjose
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Homework Statement
cos(sin-1x) = \sqrt{1-x^2}
Homework Equations
I would assume trigonometrical identities would be used to prove this.
The discussion revolves around proving the identity cos(sin-1x) = √(1 - x2), focusing on trigonometric identities and relationships between sine and cosine functions.
The conversation includes various interpretations of the problem, with some participants providing insights into the relationship between sine and cosine. There is acknowledgment of misunderstandings regarding notation and the properties of inverse functions, but no explicit consensus has been reached.
Some participants express confusion over the notation used, particularly regarding the inverse sine function and its implications. There are also mentions of potential typos and clarity issues in the original posts.
nowayjose said:I would assume trigonometrical identities would be used to prove this.
Infinitum said:PS : your thread title is misleading![]()
What you have written here makes little sense. If \theta= sin^{-1}(x) then, yes, sin(\theta)= x, but you cannot write "sin" without some argument. And the "-1" does NOT indicate reciprocal (1/x), it means the inverse function.nowayjose said:Thanks for the prompt reply!Sorry, and the question's undoubtedly stupid. I've used this method before and haven't happened to used any identities (or so i believe...).
\theta = sin^{-1}x
sin\theta = x
sin = 1/X
the cosine side must therefore be \sqrt{1-x^2}
therefore the cosine angle is
\sqrt{1-x^2} / 1
HallsofIvy said:cos(sin^{-1}(x))= \pm\sqrt{1- sin^2(sin^{-1}(x)}= \pm\sqrt{1- x^2}
nowayjose said:I know sin(sin^-1) cancel out because you add the indices, so shouldn't that leave sin x..